3A - ActinAnAss - You Out There?

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
I know you're a black republican, but . . .

Please tell me - :please: - you're not one of those Black faces supporting the bigot known as Donald Trump.
 
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At this point, I'm enjoying the show.

There are things that Trump proposed in his book that made sense *tax plan*. However, I don't fully trust that he would be able to implement the plans I agree with.

I think all of the stuff people are butthurt about is designed to keep you upset, and talking about Trump. In this political correct world we live in, a person who says what he want to say would seem appealing to many who are sick of always being corrected about something.

Plus, the people who are so mad/worried about Trump would more than likely NOT vote for him if he acted like a church mouse.

To answer your question again, NO, I'm not supporting Trump, or any other presidential candidate yet. I'm simply observing each candidate positions on different topics.
 
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To answer your question again, NO, I'm not supporting Trump, or any other presidential candidate yet. I'm simply observing each candidate positions on different topics.


LOL! You know damn well none of the republican clown parade yahoos have a chance in hell of winning against Hillary or for that matter Sanders.

I hope Cruz or Trump win the nomination. Everyone knows Trump is bat shit crazy, but you and other republican zombies have bee repeating that if the republican party ran a true conservative, they would win in a landslide since your type say that the country is truly conservative.

Cruz is the perfect wing nut to make an example out of.

I hope it comes down to this so this preposterous meme that the republican right has been spewing since the Goldwater landslide defeat is finally put to rest.

The republicans have been playing the fear and divided and concur game long enough. The world is tired of it!
 
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LOL! You know damn well none of the republican clown parade yahoos have a chance in hell of winning against Hillary or for that matter Sanders.

I hope Cruz or Trump win the nomination. Everyone knows Trump is bat shit crazy, but you and other republican zombies have bee repeating that if the republican party ran a true conservative, they would win in a landslide since your type say that the country is truly conservative.

Cruz is the perfect wing nut to make an example out of.

I hope it comes down to this so this preposterous meme that the republican right has been spewing since the Goldwater landslide defeat is finally put to rest.

The republicans have been playing the fear and divided and concur game long enough. The world is tired of it!

You might get what you are asking for.

We will see.
 
I would say this about Trump.

It would be unwise to underestimate his power. He may seem crazy to the people who won't vote for any republican, but he is striking a nerve. Not to mention, he has allies that you would not believe he has.

I'm speaking as a person who once underestimated Trump's chances.

I thought he would be gone already
 
On the real, these Trump supporters are crazy as fuck.

I mean you can't say one thing slightly negative about this dude. He is like the white Obama in that aspect.
 
In this political correct world we live in, a person who says what he want to say would seem appealing to many who are sick of always being corrected about something.

People use the phrase, "political correct" all the time and in response to just about everything. Donald Trump seems to use it to refer to any and everything he doesn't like or that he doesn't want you to like. Since the phrase appears to refer to things the speaker doesn't like, its seems impossible to give definition to the phrase.

Since you used it so eloquently above and quoted Trump approvingly, how about defining it, so that we will know what you and Trump mean when you say it?
 
People use the phrase, "political correct" all the time and in response to just about everything. Donald Trump seems to use it to refer to any and everything he doesn't like or that he doesn't want you to like. Since the phrase appears to refer to things the speaker doesn't like, its seems impossible to give definition to the phrase.

Since you used it so eloquently above and quoted Trump approvingly, how about defining it, so that we will know what you and Trump mean when you say it?

The worst thing a racist wants to be called is a racist. So they try and sanitize their racism by labeling it as not being political correct.

Lazy ass whites need to get off of their asses and stop blaming others for their incompetence.


 
People use the phrase, "political correct" all the time and in response to just about everything. Donald Trump seems to use it to refer to any and everything he doesn't like or that he doesn't want you to like. Since the phrase appears to refer to things the speaker doesn't like, its seems impossible to give definition to the phrase.

Since you used it so eloquently above and quoted Trump approvingly, how about defining it, so that we will know what you and Trump mean when you say it?

The worst thing a racist wants to be called is a racist. So they try and sanitize their racism by labeling it as not being political correct.

Lazy ass whites need to get off of their asses and stop blaming others for their incompetence.




First of all, I'm not speaking for no other man. Should I assume that you speak for President Obama?

Secondly, there has been stories after stories about some celebrity having to make a public apology about some type of remark he/she has said. To answer your question, the definition varies from person to person.

It deals with people sensibilities. In fact, many comedians have complained about not being able to have a good show without someone complaining about how "offensive" he/she was.

Marlon Wayans were talking about this on the Breakfast Club

 
First of all, I'm not speaking for no other man. Should I assume that you speak for President Obama?

. . . the definition varies from person to person.

Marlon Wayans were talking about this on the Breakfast Club

I agree, so without you speaking for someone else (Trump) or allowing someone else to speak for you (Marlon Wayans);

what is your definition of the term, politically correct ?
 
I agree, so without you speaking for someone else (Trump) or allowing someone else to speak for you (Marlon Wayans);

what is your definition of the term, politically correct ?

Why does my definition matter so much to you?

To answer your question, what's political correct to me is whatever a person says, or believes in. I'm the wrong person to ask this because not much offends me. Especially nothing from the internet.

To put it bluntly, I don't expect much love from anybody, especially my own people. So, at this point of my life, nothing really bothers me. Life is too short to be mad at this racist here, and this asshole there.

You might want to ask your progressive friends about what offends them.
 
Why does my definition matter so much to you?

Because you used the term (remember?):

. . . In this political correct world we live in, a person who says what he want to say would seem appealing to many who are sick of always being corrected about something.
and I wanted to to know what you meant by it.

To answer your question, what's political correct to me is whatever a person says, or believes in. I'm the wrong person to ask this because not much offends me. Especially nothing from the internet.
But, apparently, you didn't mean anything. Its just a phrase you use when you don't like what someone else has said or done. :smh::smh::smh:
 
Because you used the term (remember?):

and I wanted to to know what you meant by it.


But, apparently, you didn't mean anything. Its just a phrase you use when you don't like what someone else has said or done. :smh::smh::smh:

I meant what I meant.

You made this post directly towards me.

1. Politically Correct is not a conservative term. It was created by liberal think tanks who was trying to make a less offensive way to speak in workplaces, schools, and public places in general.

Not many conservatives would give a shit what anyone says. Its your side who wants "safe spaces" in life. So, to ask my definition on a term I do not agree with was idiotic on your part.

2. You already know the definition of political correctness because you are a moderator. You wouldn't have made this post, asking me if I supported Trump in the first place. Not if you already established a view on Trump, due to some of the remarks he has made. Your mind was already made up from the first time he spoke. Your mind was made up because you were either offended by his statements, or you would never support a republican in the first damn place. Maybe both.

3. Please don't twist my words. I clearly said that not much bothers me in life. I'm blessed with a good wife, good job, and great health. Again, political correctness is a term YOUR side made up. I was clearly explaining why Trump is leading in the polls. I clearly said that I'm not supporting Trump, or any republican because I have yet to make up my mind.
 
:lol::lol::lol: You used the term "In this political correct world we live in . . ." -- I asked you what that meant; you couldn't/failed to clarify -- and I'm twisiting your words . . . :roflmao:
 
1. Politically Correct is not a conservative term. It was created by liberal think tanks who was trying to make a less offensive way to speak in workplaces, schools, and public places in general.

Damn, do you listen to anything besides right wing doctrine?

source: Encyclopedia.com

Political Correctness


The term political correctness was first used in the innumerable and acrimonious discussions among Communist ideologues that took place, both in Russia and among members of Communist parties abroad, after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. The term was used, without any irony, to judge the degree of compatibility of one’s ideas or political analyses with the official party line in Moscow. Because the Kremlin position kept twisting in response to nationalist and personal interests much more than to ideological consistency, staying politically correct required agile intellectual gymnastics.

After the demise of international Communism around 1990, when there no longer was a correct, official line to be measured against, political correctness took on a second life as a term of derision used mostly by ideologues on the Right. The term was now meant to ridicule or stigmatize conformity with the opinions, or simply the vocabulary, of liberal or leftist intellectuals, mostly in academic circles. The principal targets of that ridicule were generally movements aiming to reduce prejudice and stigmatization against racial and ethnic groups, women, homosexuals, people with disabilities, and other marginalized groups.

Since the most noticeable change brought by such movements was the adoption and diffusion of neologisms and euphemisms aimed at enfranchising such groups, the semantics of tolerance became the main butt of ridicule, notably “gender-neutral” language (e.g., chairperson ); the use of new ethnic labels (such as Native American for American Indian, Roma for Gypsy, or Inuit for Eskimo ); or euphemisms (such as differently abled for disabled, or educationally challenged for slow learner ).

Soon, however, the critics of political correctness extended the scope of their attacks from the relative trivia of semantics to what they saw as a stultifying climate of hypocrisy and conformity, rampant, they alleged, on college campuses. Political correctness, they argued, stifled intellectual discourse in and out of academia, or, worse, punished the pursuit of legitimate research on, for example, the genetic bases of human behavior, sexual orientation, or gender differences.

Some scholars found themselves under assault from both the Left and the Right. For instance, the few social scientists who tried to suggest (and show) that human behavior was the product of biological as well as cultural evolution were simultaneously berated as “secular humanists” by fundamentalist Christians and as racist and sexist by their colleagues in the mainstream of their disciplines.

Intellectual climates keep changing, however, so that what may appear to be the menacing shadow of political correctness from the Left may eventually be neutralized by a rising tide of conservatism from the religious Right and the “intelligent design” movement. Reason and sanity, it seems, are always under attack, from the Left, from the Right, or, indeed, from both simultaneously. The university campus is the main theater for such jousts, and thus, also, the main depository of much nonsense. In the end, each swing of the ideological pendulum leaves a little residue of good sense. We must, however, be vigilant that the university remains the one venue where anything can be said fearlessly, and, thus, where political correctness has no place. Any restriction on intellectual discourse, even when internally generated, clashes with the central mission of the university, namely the critical examination of ideas and the diffusion of knowledge.
 
Damn, do you listen to anything besides right wing doctrine?

source: Encyclopedia.com

Political Correctness


The term political correctness was first used in the innumerable and acrimonious discussions among Communist ideologues that took place, both in Russia and among members of Communist parties abroad, after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. The term was used, without any irony, to judge the degree of compatibility of one’s ideas or political analyses with the official party line in Moscow. Because the Kremlin position kept twisting in response to nationalist and personal interests much more than to ideological consistency, staying politically correct required agile intellectual gymnastics.

After the demise of international Communism around 1990, when there no longer was a correct, official line to be measured against, political correctness took on a second life as a term of derision used mostly by ideologues on the Right. The term was now meant to ridicule or stigmatize conformity with the opinions, or simply the vocabulary, of liberal or leftist intellectuals, mostly in academic circles. The principal targets of that ridicule were generally movements aiming to reduce prejudice and stigmatization against racial and ethnic groups, women, homosexuals, people with disabilities, and other marginalized groups.

Since the most noticeable change brought by such movements was the adoption and diffusion of neologisms and euphemisms aimed at enfranchising such groups, the semantics of tolerance became the main butt of ridicule, notably “gender-neutral” language (e.g., chairperson ); the use of new ethnic labels (such as Native American for American Indian, Roma for Gypsy, or Inuit for Eskimo ); or euphemisms (such as differently abled for disabled, or educationally challenged for slow learner ).

Soon, however, the critics of political correctness extended the scope of their attacks from the relative trivia of semantics to what they saw as a stultifying climate of hypocrisy and conformity, rampant, they alleged, on college campuses. Political correctness, they argued, stifled intellectual discourse in and out of academia, or, worse, punished the pursuit of legitimate research on, for example, the genetic bases of human behavior, sexual orientation, or gender differences.

Some scholars found themselves under assault from both the Left and the Right. For instance, the few social scientists who tried to suggest (and show) that human behavior was the product of biological as well as cultural evolution were simultaneously berated as “secular humanists” by fundamentalist Christians and as racist and sexist by their colleagues in the mainstream of their disciplines.

Intellectual climates keep changing, however, so that what may appear to be the menacing shadow of political correctness from the Left may eventually be neutralized by a rising tide of conservatism from the religious Right and the “intelligent design” movement. Reason and sanity, it seems, are always under attack, from the Left, from the Right, or, indeed, from both simultaneously. The university campus is the main theater for such jousts, and thus, also, the main depository of much nonsense. In the end, each swing of the ideological pendulum leaves a little residue of good sense. We must, however, be vigilant that the university remains the one venue where anything can be said fearlessly, and, thus, where political correctness has no place. Any restriction on intellectual discourse, even when internally generated, clashes with the central mission of the university, namely the critical examination of ideas and the diffusion of knowledge.

1. Communism started this shit.

2. Do to where "political correctness" started from, it's no surprise that the right would be against it.

My whole point about the whole political correctness issue is this. For the past 9 years, we *the West* have been bombarded with the whole "if you say something that may offend someone APOLOGIZE!!!" movement. There's no surprise how a man, who speaks his mind, would resonate with a vast number of people in this country.

Think about it like this, if you were a star football player in a urban high school. What would happen if you ended up transferring to a suburban school that's mostly upper middle class? Chances are, you would clean up with the women that goes to that suburban school. Sometimes being different is all you need to become the Alpha in the room.
 
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