Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Scott Sisters on the Jane Velez-Mitchell show
One of the latest news have to do with the unfair incarceration of the Scott sisters. I had to go to NAACP web site right away, after reading a few details about their unjust sentence, and consequently - with a quick click of the mouse - fully support the letter for their immediate release.
I felt obliged to do so, because the sentence - Unless there is something else the press has not written about up to this point - seems ludicrous, racially motivated, and pardon the redundancy: simply unjust.
The judge on the case may have been biased since the very beginning, even before the case hit his docket in the first place. Little doubt is in my mind though, that he could very well have some ties to any of these hatred groups that mainly have consisted of uneducated, misinformed, Southerners who have inhabited the United States.
While it could be scientifically true that Black people may be fittingly advantageous over the Asian, Hispanic and Caucasian counterparts, and hence the ingrained skills they are unconsciously born with, make them slightly physical dependent on those aforementioned features, which as a result may adjust their mental abilities to a lesser capacity notch compared to their motor skills they are so lucky to possess, it doesn’t necessarily mean they are at a higher risk during their lifetime to commit hideous or any sort of violent acts than the rest.
So, it is a human act to support these ladies. Besides, no one got hurt in the altercation that took place a few years ago.
Shame on Judge Marcus Gordon. Support these ladies and let them go back to their families. http://action.naacp.org/page/s/scottsisters
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Rick Sanchez Fired... Is Hispanic the new Black?
One of the reasons the Christian community despise the Jewish counterpart has to do, not only exclusively with the complete denial and recognition of Jesus of Nazareth as the Messiah, as it has been manifested throughout history from the latter society, but perhaps slightly more with the obfuscation of the Jews to accept Christianity religion's views altogether. It is a sad state of affairs that both sides can't find a common ground to agree at. It looks as if they won't live happily ever after.
In the latest of these disputes we see a Miami-broadcaster and journalist Rick Sanchez stating more or less than Jews are the ones to be blamed for the degeneration of society in general. Although he said it in other words, and used instead the 'liberal' terminology to the impeding issue, one may wonder whether or not it is valid his argument.
Were Rick Sanchez from African descent, would CNN fire him?
It is ironic though, how much CNN finds it hurtful and extremely offensive all of Rick Sanchez's remarks and yet they don't hesitate for a second to terminate him. They certainly dismissed any future apologies that Sanchez may have presented to them.
So the question here is whether stand-up comedians are exclusively saved from using discriminatory remarks to and fro and yet they feel 'bad' whenever a non stand-up comedian uses them as well.
Does Jon Stewart have some sort of pass which allows him to say anything he wants against Jews or anyone else as he wishes because he is just a stand-up comedian, or because he is simply Jew?
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