Mike Ditka: ‘No Oppression or social injustice in the Last 100 Years’

Do you niggas not see the cycle?

This is all the fuck our community do.

Someone says something or does something offensive . . .

. . . we get mad for a few days to however long ...

...then we're over it.

This is why no one take us seriously. We rather be emotional than a strategic collective.

...AND the sad part about it is, as much as I've said this to other people, they act like I have six heads.

White folks didn't get to this point by being emotional.

Nobody with their own system is running it off of emotion. You may feel a certain way, but emotional spikes only last for so long. What's driving you after THAT?

I promise you, if they give Kaep a damn job, with a phat contract, many people will act like the battle has been won...

...'cause they never really knew what the shit was about to begin with. I'm sorry, but I see deeply into things, and I know that the way we move is not going to get us anywhere.

Its like someone who thinks going to a motivational speaking seminar is going to light a fire under them. If you don't have it, that fire will be short lived.

Fuck it.

Ya'll stay mad.

Serious question. What do you do too combat white supremacy?
 
These CAC's true colors are coming out now. Honestly, I am not surprised about any of this shit.

tumblr_ox9lxjH1AJ1talh43o1_500.jpg
 
Like I always say the 85 Bears was Buddy Ryan's team. Overrated Dickheadka needs to shrivel up an blow away.
This what I have always said. Defense wins championships. When was the last time you saw a Defensive Coordinator carried off the field after a Super Bowl besides Buddy Ryan. Some reason Chicago holds him as some football god. If he was such a football god he would have won more Super Bowls and would have won with the Saints. Fuck him and the NFL.
 
Another white man who wants to pretend that everyone is living with the same rights and protections under the law.
Classic white idiot.
 
I never liked that self righteous, overbearing, piece of shit ever since he snubbed Walter for the first touchdown in the superbowl and replaced him with the Fridge.
Then when they had a superbowl celebration at city hall , It pained him to shake our Mayor's hand Harold Washington who is black.
It was like he was angry and ungrateful, He was very curt with the mayor and was a total ass.
 
being a white (rich) male has got to be awesome. You get the ignore all type of shit because you are not personally impacted.

racism doesn't exist except for reverse racism of course
blm is just as bad as the kkk
there are good ppl on both sides
all lives matter
blue live matter

You're right. When you're rich, you can live above all the nonsense the lower classes have to endure. Even rich black folks live above the shit that poor black folk have to deal with everyday.

These folks stay in there bubble. That's why I respect people like Kaep that humbled himself to be active in an area he can totally ignore or live above if he wanted to.

Yeah, there is racial injustice against Black and Brown folk, but my beef is with the greedy rich folks. The billionaires. The hundred millions dollar folks. The folk with enough money to feed nations.
 
This guy's a blithering idiot. But he is the typical white American.. He sees everything As being our fault. If we get beat by the police it was because of something we did to make the policeman angry. If we get killed by the police we should have complied. If Puerto Rico really wanted help from America they would have moved the island closer
 
Joe Namath responds to Mike Ditka: 'Look up the meaning of oppression'

Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka made one of his more ignorant statements on Monday when he claimed that there has been no oppression in America for the past 100 years. Fellow Hall of Famer Joe Namath had a strong rebuke to Ditka’s remarks.

In an appearance on Fox & Friends on Tuesday, the former Jets quarterback defended the NFL players’ protest of racial inequality and responded to Ditka.

Namath said when asked about Ditka’s remarks at the end of the interview:

“Look up the meaning of oppression. Look up the definition of oppression, and you understand that it’s obviously taken place.”

Namath, who last year urged the Jets to consider Colin Kaepernick, defended the message that Kaepernick initially set out to bring attention to with his protests:

“Going back to what Colin Kaepernick initially did, it was to point out some injustice that’s being done to the black race. Or to people that obviously when you look — and I say obviously, some of these dash cams and shootings that were done to unarmed people and all. He was reaching out to try to get it more investigated. So that’s where this oppression thing comes in.”

Namath believed that the message of NFL protests during the national anthem had turned into a national dialogue about patriotism and the flag rather than the intended message of standing up to racial inequality.

When asked if he would kneel for the anthem, Namath wasn’t ready to go that far. But he did say:

“I’m not there, but I’ve never walked in a black man’s shoes either.”
 
Joe Namath responds to Mike Ditka: 'Look up the meaning of oppression'

Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka made one of his more ignorant statements on Monday when he claimed that there has been no oppression in America for the past 100 years. Fellow Hall of Famer Joe Namath had a strong rebuke to Ditka’s remarks.

In an appearance on Fox & Friends on Tuesday, the former Jets quarterback defended the NFL players’ protest of racial inequality and responded to Ditka.

Namath said when asked about Ditka’s remarks at the end of the interview:

“Look up the meaning of oppression. Look up the definition of oppression, and you understand that it’s obviously taken place.”

Namath, who last year urged the Jets to consider Colin Kaepernick, defended the message that Kaepernick initially set out to bring attention to with his protests:

“Going back to what Colin Kaepernick initially did, it was to point out some injustice that’s being done to the black race. Or to people that obviously when you look — and I say obviously, some of these dash cams and shootings that were done to unarmed people and all. He was reaching out to try to get it more investigated. So that’s where this oppression thing comes in.”

Namath believed that the message of NFL protests during the national anthem had turned into a national dialogue about patriotism and the flag rather than the intended message of standing up to racial inequality.

When asked if he would kneel for the anthem, Namath wasn’t ready to go that far. But he did say:

I’m not there, but I’ve never walked in a black man’s shoes either.”

He earn my respect with this answer.......
 
Joe Namath responds to Mike Ditka: 'Look up the meaning of oppression'

Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka made one of his more ignorant statements on Monday when he claimed that there has been no oppression in America for the past 100 years. Fellow Hall of Famer Joe Namath had a strong rebuke to Ditka’s remarks.

In an appearance on Fox & Friends on Tuesday, the former Jets quarterback defended the NFL players’ protest of racial inequality and responded to Ditka.

Namath said when asked about Ditka’s remarks at the end of the interview:

“Look up the meaning of oppression. Look up the definition of oppression, and you understand that it’s obviously taken place.”

Namath, who last year urged the Jets to consider Colin Kaepernick, defended the message that Kaepernick initially set out to bring attention to with his protests:

“Going back to what Colin Kaepernick initially did, it was to point out some injustice that’s being done to the black race. Or to people that obviously when you look — and I say obviously, some of these dash cams and shootings that were done to unarmed people and all. He was reaching out to try to get it more investigated. So that’s where this oppression thing comes in.”

Namath believed that the message of NFL protests during the national anthem had turned into a national dialogue about patriotism and the flag rather than the intended message of standing up to racial inequality.

When asked if he would kneel for the anthem, Namath wasn’t ready to go that far. But he did say:

“I’m not there, but I’ve never walked in a black man’s shoes either.”

Yeah, he gave a respectable answer.
 
Mike Ditka speaks for black people; the ones who
were lynched, who had dogs set on them by Bull
Connor, the ones who were barred on account race
from eating at certain restaurants or enrolling at certain
schools. He even speaks for Jesse Owens, who after
"fighting Hitler's oppression" at the 1936 Olympic
games was forced to use the service elevator to
attend a banquet in his honour at a hotel in New York;
He speaks for Jackie Robinson who was called a
Nigg*r..

Yep. Why do blacks need their voices to be heard
when there is a Polish man from Pittsburgh who
can say everything that needs to be said on behalf
of black People?

:cool: propz
 
Joe Namath responds to Mike Ditka: 'Look up the meaning of oppression'

Hall of Fame coach Mike Ditka made one of his more ignorant statements on Monday when he claimed that there has been no oppression in America for the past 100 years. Fellow Hall of Famer Joe Namath had a strong rebuke to Ditka’s remarks.

In an appearance on Fox & Friends on Tuesday, the former Jets quarterback defended the NFL players’ protest of racial inequality and responded to Ditka.

Namath said when asked about Ditka’s remarks at the end of the interview:

“Look up the meaning of oppression. Look up the definition of oppression, and you understand that it’s obviously taken place.”

Namath, who last year urged the Jets to consider Colin Kaepernick, defended the message that Kaepernick initially set out to bring attention to with his protests:

“Going back to what Colin Kaepernick initially did, it was to point out some injustice that’s being done to the black race. Or to people that obviously when you look — and I say obviously, some of these dash cams and shootings that were done to unarmed people and all. He was reaching out to try to get it more investigated. So that’s where this oppression thing comes in.”

Namath believed that the message of NFL protests during the national anthem had turned into a national dialogue about patriotism and the flag rather than the intended message of standing up to racial inequality.

When asked if he would kneel for the anthem, Namath wasn’t ready to go that far. But he did say:

“I’m not there, but I’ve never walked in a black man’s shoes either.”

Well once again

Broadway Joe pulls one out of no where

Salute
 
notice how THESE comments conveniently leave the media discussion....

and the fire marshal calling coach tomlin a n*gger.

they aint slick.

Question is why WE keep falling for it.
 
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