Nigga going off early on a monday.
I didnt even post yesterday and had these niggas talking about me all night. I clearly have affected these dickriders and angered them over the years as well as angered them over holding lesser superstars accountable these playoffs. Just seeing me praise LeBron, a Black man, has them triggered. They upset cuz with Bron out we see just how wack some of his contemporaries are at carrying the league to the point we looking for guys in their 1st playoff ever to do it.
I'm gonna be posting a lot more about Kobe's death and MJ wacking his daddy since we can reminisce on old times forever.

When Kobe died he instantly became a better player and Jordan wasnt called GOAT til his daddy died. Its very pivotal to both of their archs to never forget these occurences.
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. —
This story originally ran in the Chicago Tribune on Aug. 14, 1993
For more than a week, the body found floating in Gum Swamp Creek, 60 miles south of here, was a John Doe case that drew little interest.
But Friday, John Doe became James Jordan, father of the world’s most famous athlete, and everybody from the FBI in North Carolina to Michael Jordan’s admirers in Chicago and across the country was vitally concerned.
The Bulls’ star guard and other grieving family members stayed in seclusion, while police continued to shed little light on the troubling mysteries surrounding James Jordan’s disappearance and death from a gunshot to the chest.
In addition to questions surrounding his killing, there were also questions about how officials handled the case.
The body of James Jordan, found Aug. 3, was positively identified from partial dental records early Friday. Police made the connection to Jordan only because a missing Lexus 400 found in a wooded area near Fayetteville had been traced to him.
Jordan's fingerprints were not sent for evaluation when the body was found in South Carolina. His prints were on file with authorities. And his body already has been cremated-after the autopsy but before it was positively identified.
The body, recovered in South Carolina from a tributary of the Little Pee Dee River, was in bad condition, and the fisherman who found it could not at first tell if it was male or female.
The car was found Aug. 5-stripped and gutted, with the vanity license plate UNC0023 missing.
Cumberland County, N.C., Sheriff Morris Bedsole said he was “not satisfied with the results of the initial investigation of the found vehicle” and ordered the follow-up work that led to the identification of Jordan as the owner.
On Friday, authorities arrested 16-year-old Fayetteville youth in connection with the car-stripping incident, but Bedsole said it was unlikely that the youth was involved in the Jordan death.
The FBI entered the case because it was a possible kidnapping, a crime of federal jurisdiction. But investigators said there was no conclusive proof that there had been a kidnapping-only a car in one state and a body just over the border.
“We know very little more right now,” said an FBI spokesman in Washington.
The investigation of the murder of James Jordan is printed in the Chicago Tribune on Aug. 14, 1993. (Chicago Tribune Archives)
The spokesman said investigators would be searching phone and credit card records to provide clues to where Jordan might have been since he was last seen July 22 after attending a friend’s funeral near Wilmington, N.C.
Jordan, who would have turned 56 on July 31, frequently joined his son on the road and even starred with him in an underwear commercial. He apparently was missing for nearly three weeks before family members grew alarmed. They did not file a missing person report until Thursday.
Family friends said it was not unusual for him to be away several days at a time because of his business interests.
After Jordan attended the funeral of his friend Willie Kemp on July 22, he went to the home of Kemp’ northwest of Wilmington.
Jordan then apparently drove friends back to Wilmington, leaving about 9 p.m. Carolyn Robinson, who rode with him, said Jordan told her he planned to drive to his home near Charlotte several hours away, to catch a flight to Chicago the next day.
Jordan ate dinner at her home, then changed clothes for the drive, she said. "I asked him to call me when he got there, and he said he would. He never did, but I didn't think anything of it," she said. "He was so busy."
However, some family members believed that following the funeral Jordan was going to travel to Hilton Head, S.C., where the Jordans have a home. It is not clear whether Jordan went to Hilton Head.
Jordan's wife, Deloris, and other family members told Union County, N.C., sheriff's police that Jordan had agreed to join his son at a benefit in Chicago on July 23. He never made it to Chicago as planned.
This did not cause any alarm in the Jordan family, said Sgt. Ben Bailey, a spokesman for the Union County sheriff.
“The family’s a busy family, according to the wife, and it was not unusual for him to change plans in midstream and not to hear from him for several days,” Bailey said.
Jordan reportedly called an employee at his clothing company in South Carolina on July 26. "That's the last anyone had seen or heard from him," Bailey said.
He may already have been dead by his birthday on July 31. Doctors in South Carolina who examined the body estimated that Jordan had been dead for a week or more before the body was found.
Jordan had lived in North Carolina most of his life, working as a forklift operator for General Electric before becoming a manager there. In 1985, he pleaded guilty to accepting a $7,000 kickback from a private contractor while in charge of inventory at GE's Wilmington plant.
In recent years, he regularly attended his son's games, becoming almost a team member as he followed his son from town to town.
During the National Basketball Association playoffs in New York last spring, he joined his son for a gambling trip to Atlantic City and defended Michael when he was criticized for the excursion.
Bulls players and officials recalled the elder Jordan fondly on Friday.
Outside Michael Jordan’s Restaurant, 500 N. LaSalle St., Chicago, which didn’t open Friday because of the death, Ann Richardson of San Diego videotaped the nation’s newest sports mecca.
“My heart goes out to the Jordans,” Richardson said. “I pray they find who did this.”
Tribune staff writer George Papajohn and Tribune wires contributed to this article.
Mystery shrouds Michael Jordan dad’s killing in 1993 - Chicago Tribune