UPDATE: Tariq Nasheed pushed for $7Mil for Hidden History Museum; Tariq finally admits FBA isn’t about reparations

I am confused. Is fba mofos black Americans or are they American Indians. Did they want him to claim fba so that thy could attack him and say he's Puerto rican?
so Carmelo aint FBA but tariq kids r ? tariq says Drake aint fba! like why would anyone on earth wanna claim an acronym hatecult as their lineage?
also they Indians & the original Egyptian asiatic Hebrew jew turtle island original Scotts original aliens original Japanese Ainu original moor freedmen .. did I miss anything ? :roflmao3: :roflmao3:
 
so Carmelo aint FBA but tariq kids r ? tariq says Drake aint fba! like why would anyone on earth wanna claim an acronym hatecult as their lineage?
also they Indians & the original Egyptian asiatic Hebrew jew turtle island original Scotts original aliens original Japanese Ainu original moor freedmen .. did I miss anything ? :roflmao3: :roflmao3:


I think they claiming Greek too I'm not sure. @footloose aka bootyloose please confirm.
 
I think they claiming Greek too I'm not sure. @footloose aka bootyloose please confirm.


Footloose Dancing GIFs - Find & Share on GIPHY
 
Trumps brags about this countries greatest accomplishments

Well whadda ya know. I hope he knows.




From fba. Yout welcome
 


The Black unemployment rate is at its highest since 2021. Here's why that's a bad sign for the economy.​



Summary


Emma Ockerman
Unemployment for Black Americans is at its worst level since the pandemic, with some economists seeing the latest results as a sign of worse things to come for the US economy.

The unemployment rate for Black Americans hit 7.5% in August, according to seasonally adjusted data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, its highest since October 2021— more than double the rate seen for white workers. Some possible reasons include federal job cuts and tariff-fueled economic uncertainty.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for Black men, at 7.1%, was slightly higher than the 6.7% unemployment rate seen for Black women in August, though Black women have seen bigger employment losses since the first quarter of this year. (Black teens of both sexes, ages 16-19, had an unemployment rate of 24.8%.)

That's not a great thing for the country's economic well-being.

“What we find typically is that the unemployment rates that you see for the young, for Blacks — and particularly Black males — are a telltale sign of the direction of the economy and what we can expect to see hit overall in a few months,” said Gary Hoover, an economist at Tulane University.

Gbenga Ajilore, chief economist at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, similarly sees Black unemployment as a “canary in the coal mine.” He added, “If it’s steadily starting to go up, that portends that the economy might be heading toward a downturn."

Tough market

The country’s broader unemployment rate had been hovering between 4% and 4.2% since May 2024, only to crack out of that narrow band and hit 4.3% in August’s bruising jobs report, which showed the US economy added just 22,000 jobs that month. That was far below the 75,000 positions economists had anticipated.

Revised numbers also showed the economy shed 13,000 jobs in June, the first net job loss since 2020. Downward revisions to jobs numbers included in July’s job report, which also showed fewer than expected monthly gains, led President Trump to fire former BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer.

Other signals of a tough labor market abound. The unemployment rate for workers above the age of 25 with a bachelor’s degree, for instance, is also at its highest since the pandemic, and there were more jobless Americans than available positions in July for the first time since April 2021. Since Black workers are often seen as the “last hired, first fired,” tight labor conditions may impact them in particular, Ajilore said.

Some of the job losses for Black workers can also be explained by sector-specific trends. For example, Black workers made up nearly 19% of the federal workforce, which has been significantly reduced since President Trump took office. The federal government is down 97,000 jobs since January, according to the Labor Department.
 


The Black unemployment rate is at its highest since 2021. Here's why that's a bad sign for the economy.​



Summary


Emma Ockerman
Unemployment for Black Americans is at its worst level since the pandemic, with some economists seeing the latest results as a sign of worse things to come for the US economy.

The unemployment rate for Black Americans hit 7.5% in August, according to seasonally adjusted data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, its highest since October 2021— more than double the rate seen for white workers. Some possible reasons include federal job cuts and tariff-fueled economic uncertainty.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for Black men, at 7.1%, was slightly higher than the 6.7% unemployment rate seen for Black women in August, though Black women have seen bigger employment losses since the first quarter of this year. (Black teens of both sexes, ages 16-19, had an unemployment rate of 24.8%.)

That's not a great thing for the country's economic well-being.

“What we find typically is that the unemployment rates that you see for the young, for Blacks — and particularly Black males — are a telltale sign of the direction of the economy and what we can expect to see hit overall in a few months,” said Gary Hoover, an economist at Tulane University.

Gbenga Ajilore, chief economist at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, similarly sees Black unemployment as a “canary in the coal mine.” He added, “If it’s steadily starting to go up, that portends that the economy might be heading toward a downturn."

Tough market

The country’s broader unemployment rate had been hovering between 4% and 4.2% since May 2024, only to crack out of that narrow band and hit 4.3% in August’s bruising jobs report, which showed the US economy added just 22,000 jobs that month. That was far below the 75,000 positions economists had anticipated.

Revised numbers also showed the economy shed 13,000 jobs in June, the first net job loss since 2020. Downward revisions to jobs numbers included in July’s job report, which also showed fewer than expected monthly gains, led President Trump to fire former BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer.

Other signals of a tough labor market abound. The unemployment rate for workers above the age of 25 with a bachelor’s degree, for instance, is also at its highest since the pandemic, and there were more jobless Americans than available positions in July for the first time since April 2021. Since Black workers are often seen as the “last hired, first fired,” tight labor conditions may impact them in particular, Ajilore said.

Some of the job losses for Black workers can also be explained by sector-specific trends. For example, Black workers made up nearly 19% of the federal workforce, which has been significantly reduced since President Trump took office. The federal government is down 97,000 jobs since January, according to the Labor Department.

Sounds like the opposite of reparations is currently happening....


antonyms of reparation https://share.google/IAJTiaGzMy4C6C2hm

reparation

Similar and opposite words

Opposite of the act by which something is repaired or renewed. neglect. damage. destruction. breaking.
 
this is ur brain on FBA /Pretendian ideology ,they always been there, they used to be on the street corners ,they've now moved online theres many pathway to this antiBlack antiAfrican anti-intellectualism , this one of them :roflmao::roflmao:

 


The Black unemployment rate is at its highest since 2021. Here's why that's a bad sign for the economy.​



Summary


Emma Ockerman
Unemployment for Black Americans is at its worst level since the pandemic, with some economists seeing the latest results as a sign of worse things to come for the US economy.

The unemployment rate for Black Americans hit 7.5% in August, according to seasonally adjusted data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, its highest since October 2021— more than double the rate seen for white workers. Some possible reasons include federal job cuts and tariff-fueled economic uncertainty.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for Black men, at 7.1%, was slightly higher than the 6.7% unemployment rate seen for Black women in August, though Black women have seen bigger employment losses since the first quarter of this year. (Black teens of both sexes, ages 16-19, had an unemployment rate of 24.8%.)

That's not a great thing for the country's economic well-being.

“What we find typically is that the unemployment rates that you see for the young, for Blacks — and particularly Black males — are a telltale sign of the direction of the economy and what we can expect to see hit overall in a few months,” said Gary Hoover, an economist at Tulane University.

Gbenga Ajilore, chief economist at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, similarly sees Black unemployment as a “canary in the coal mine.” He added, “If it’s steadily starting to go up, that portends that the economy might be heading toward a downturn."

Tough market

The country’s broader unemployment rate had been hovering between 4% and 4.2% since May 2024, only to crack out of that narrow band and hit 4.3% in August’s bruising jobs report, which showed the US economy added just 22,000 jobs that month. That was far below the 75,000 positions economists had anticipated.

Revised numbers also showed the economy shed 13,000 jobs in June, the first net job loss since 2020. Downward revisions to jobs numbers included in July’s job report, which also showed fewer than expected monthly gains, led President Trump to fire former BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer.

Other signals of a tough labor market abound. The unemployment rate for workers above the age of 25 with a bachelor’s degree, for instance, is also at its highest since the pandemic, and there were more jobless Americans than available positions in July for the first time since April 2021. Since Black workers are often seen as the “last hired, first fired,” tight labor conditions may impact them in particular, Ajilore said.

Some of the job losses for Black workers can also be explained by sector-specific trends. For example, Black workers made up nearly 19% of the federal workforce, which has been significantly reduced since President Trump took office. The federal government is down 97,000 jobs since January, according to the Labor Department.



hope y'all paying attention ..one poster posts the above & another poster (who claim to be pro black & defenders of black America) is more interested in whitesupremacist laden posts like the below.. and never posts anything like the above




pay attention
 

we know why u post shit like this so ur hatecult members can all gather & have red meat for their whitesupremacist rhetoric about Africans but now from a black face person
























so now GROK is lying becos it contradicts their cult leader & whitesupremacist rhetoric about Afrcians

grok corrected him & he still stands on his cults ideology

 
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Oh now this fether shook. Everybody wanna be a maga till it’s time to be a magga
The yns got more heart than this pussy
 
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