Posts posted by richardmurray
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ITs fine @Troy
I know you have opposed am*zon's ways, but google or am*zon or whomever are the same as firms that are looking to dominate the internet.
The site runs well. You know my philosophy, do as best you can , and it is up to us in this group, this community, to improve it as well. Increase membership with our popularity.
One day AALBC will be able to have its own advertisement system, that to me is the real goal advertising wise on this site.
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Abortion isn't ended, each state in the union has the right to have its own abortion laws. a black woman in NY state is in the same situation before the supreme courts ruling as after.
So, for black women that live in states that outlaw abortion what does it matter? well , most of those states are southern or midwestern.
Now, the black descended of enslaved populace in the USA's oldest regions of living are in the southern states. Does this ruling matter? no. what matters to black people in mississippi/louisian/alabama/texas/georgia <outside the affluent blacks>/carolinas is the same thing that has mattered to black people in those places before the war between the states.
How can we be free of the environment we are in that is controlled by whites? The answer is still the answer it was, for most, no way and the black populace offers no opportunity as a collective to help. Most Black individuals have to fend for themselves.
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that video you shared @Mel Hopkins I laughed the whole way
"I am sociologically programmed to want chocolate on valentines day:
"I just found out idris elba follows me"
"Stop bragging, <with disgusted face> I wasn't following him"
"my dream interracial relationship is idris elba... my nervous system would shut down"
<The black male actor who I think is hetero I think he was in the film, how stella got her groove back and he is licking his lips talking about idris sexually>
The photo of idris elba touching the then pregnant white woman's belly and her smile...
"He's the funniest kindest most down to earth person ever ... he's heaven"
"He's not intimidatingly suave"
circa 5:11 the eyes of the mulatto colored black women when she said : "he has been sexy for a minute"
Said woman asked him:"you did those stunts" and he replied "yes baby" and her reaction
media women, classic
Interesting that his crush is fellow long time married thespian, meryl streep.
the white pregnant woman
I have never had a stranger female put her hands out to hug me like that. I don't think I would want that either to be honest.
"it didn't feel long enough when I did it"
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@Mel Hopkins english isn't my second language but my dialect of english is different than yours, which to be blunt isn't foreign in the usa.
Fair enough, I need to accept the patience to ask online. Offline I am more patient with communication than online and that will probably never change.
@ProfD fair enough
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This is another aside to Mel Hopkin's post main point ...
@ProfD well... Miscegenation has occurred since the time of NArmer through the silk road to now. I don't know about any group of women being easier or more accessible. If anything the enslaved black woman was the most accessible and most accessed female in the history of the usa or the english colonies that preceded it. but that doesn't stem from black women themselves and many white women in the usa like all women throughout humanity have communal pressures still.
But Yes, black athletes are put in a path to return wealth into the white community that they earn legally with total merit through a white wife, but most black athletes in the usa marry black women.
If you take out USA + Brasil very few countries have anywhere near the level of miscegenation, phenotypically at least, than said two. And it makes sense.
JAck Johnson was an outlier, most black boxers did not marry white women. I think when it comes to black athletes we in the black community have to stop taking high profile examples of black athletes marrying white women and making it seem like it is the common activity for black athletes when it never was and isn't. I comprehend why it bothers many black people so cause many black people nonviolently fight the war with whites through media images through inspirations. So when these images are presented the messages in them for said black people is a defeat. But I was never swayed by media.
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@Mel Hopkins ahh I thought you had copied and pasted content from the guy in the image. I see.
2. I will not get into a word debate with you my fellow wordsmith.
3. KArdashians are white, I know, I thought I said that.
4. I see... I don't know what you mean by access, i will assume that means more than average money, but don't most women go with their own kind at a financial level?
I did comprehend but I just wanted to mention about Odom. My comment was meant as an aside. Not to the theme of the post. I should had stated that from the beginning
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@Pioneer1 after reading greg's comment, it seems his solution is in two parts: 1 every black woman must be married 2 every black man must be a loving financially able partner.
The problem is, the assumptions.
1. that a fiscally poor or unemployed child or adult from a happy home or part of a happy home will not roam the streets or commit illegalities or commit crimes for profit.
2. that unmarried parents are by default bad parents. That is another false assumption.
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After reading the prose, I have to mention one small point. if kardashians represent the so called better class woman, ala privileged, who the black guy quoted seems to think is white then black men need to worry about all those relationships cause I follow sports. and, a basketball player by the name of Lamar Odom used to be considered one of the best in the league and after his tenure with a kardashian, I don't know their names, he forgot how to play ball or train or manage himself.
Now I do think of Get Out from Peele and that line, she licking your balls and shit. I wonder what said kardashian did to lamar odom but his story before during and after getting with a white woman is a cautionary tale in my view to any brothers thinking towards those lines. And to brothers not thinking towards those lines it is a reason <not the biggest reason to stick with your kind or at least in color lines, that is the beauty of Black women or women of color in general over the white woman> near the end of the exhibit line.
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Support Criblore a new production from Filledwithmagic productions from Moon Ferguson
https://aalbc.com/tc/profile/6477-richardmurray/?status=1956&type=status -
Congrats to Francia Marquez, but I hope she acts like the best of Black leadership, not the common or mediocre. Black people in South America need/warrant/deserve better than what Black people in North America had or have in government or leadership in general.
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@Delano that is fine, this is all for fun. I didn't expect any commentary and i only hoped to generate thoughts or thinking offline. So what has come:) is surprising but good enough.
@Pioneer1 I have been fortunate to have many, not all but I say most, unshy women in my offline life.
... I once saw a woman in the street, downtown, she was paraplegic, chair bound and she had a man who was sitting next to her, also paraplegic, chairbound. They got many stares. but I watched them from a distance, as I wrote poetry inspired by their enjoyment of each other. So don't worry, as long as you find someone who wants to walk the road of life with you, all will be well.
@Cynique thank you for your reply
@Mel Hopkins thank you for your reply
Happy belated father's day or juneteenth to all:) may all father's continue to earn respect and all people whose forebears were enslaved in recent times enjoy their freedom and yearn for even more
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@Cynique you were born in 1933... I am shocked you even bother with online communication, but thanks for interacting.
Your correct about juneteenth but I quote myself
Quotewhen i was kid my parents plus other elders made sure by the time i was halfway through elementary i knew all key moments of black history in the usa.
Juneteenth is specific to the black populace in texas. But the 13th amendment could be mentioned couldn't. I daresay maybe even celebrated, but I comprehend that while the civil rights act of the 1960s is mentioned heavily, black people have never seemed interested in celebrating the 13th amendment, which is the true end of slavery legally outside of prisons. It seems to me, black parents should be catering to the black populace in their home when communicating to their children. I don't know why black people need white people to cater to black folk if black folk actually value it. You say i generalize. Your right, I assume. I can't speak or assess every black parents. But I am not generalizing. I am mentioning a flaw or a problem. History isn't merely something you read, it can be something you lived and black people lived our pain. Black parents lived our pain. all black parents had to do to educate any black child on the usa was tell their children their life story. Black parents who didn't which included some , I daresay most, elders in my clan or bloodline are failures. I have heard the reasons offline, but they were wrong.
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WARNING: a personal question is asked so simply don't reply if offended, don't reply if insulted. Only reply if you want to answer, and no man should comment as no man is a woman. And if a man must comment please don't be disrespectful. I have never banned a comment nor is that my way online but...
I ask women in AALBC a simple yes or no question. Based on interactions with black men in intimate settings, can you count all the orgasm you had on both hands in your life?
This does not include orgasms by yourself or aided by a machine by yourselves or with a woman.
For my extra thoughts
Single Status Update from 06/18/2022 by richardmurray - AALBC.com’s Discussion Forums
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@harry brown the question is define freedom?
before you can judge juneteenth you have to ask, how do black people define freedom?
Many black people in the usa define freedom as the ability to vote/own a business/fuck a white person in peace /serve in the military.
Based on that definition black people have already gotten freedom. But what happens when a black person defines freedom as black power. What happens when a black person defines freedom as no nonblacks with black control all over? Based on those definitions juneteenth wasn't.
So the question is how do black people define freedom? and from a media view, the problem is, most black people viewed in media will never admit that a greater variance exists in the black populace of the usa or in the larger humanity for their agenda to force through peer pressure all black people to view freedom the same way.
But the question isn't is juneteenth freedom but does juneteenth match the freedom as a black person or group defines it ?
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My issue with this question like many is the unwillingness to be concise in the original poster or later by the poster.
You have to first define how you rank peoples?
Are you saying blacks in the USA as compared to other peoples in the USA?
Well, from white statistics the native american has worse statistics than black americans.
so from a white statistical view, blacks aren't behind everyone else if you view native americans as part of everyone else.
Now if you are going into geopolitics, the white european american has kin in powerful european countries. the asian american whether white or black has kin in powerful asian countries. Countries in africa or in the americas south of the usa have no member like a china/russia/india who are nuclear powers thus command a respect that non nuclear powers do not warrant.
The question is how do you define the status of groups.
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@Mel Hopkins I oppose your historical statement, business enterprise and job creation wasn't the only path that could had led to a better tomorrow or for black survival. If we had a child, and you told our child that I would say to our child, that is a lie. But that is what a lot of black people in key roles in the black populace chose to do. I do not say it to desire a change in the past but I oppose that black people had only one path to survival in the commonly called antebellum south.
NYC is fortunate, local news comes in many forms. If you know where to look in nyc local news can give rare views. It was local news that allowed me to hear what sean bell's father said which black newspapers in nyc didn't even state. Yes, your 100% correct all shows have an audience they are reaching for. but, from shows like Like IT Is, which is gone, to black news outlets in NYC, to shows like democracy now. I find alot of truth in these venues. but most places, cities or towns, in the USA don't have the internal media that NYC does.
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Richard Murray's Pulpit Episode 2
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