God Wants New Orleans to be Black City

J.B said:
I thought blacks were these hard workers that built America?

Hmm, I think that was ONLY in the era when their owners could whip them and club them and force them to work.

Since we can't whip or club them anymore, ...well, many of the blacks don't seem to want to work as hard. They seem to prefer holding out their hands for the government handouts.

Baron Max
 
I thought blacks were these hard workers that built America?

Not really. At the time, they probably comprised of 1 or 2% of the population. Currently, I believe the number is closer to 13% of the population
 
Baron Max said:
Hmm, I think that was ONLY in the era when their owners could whip them and club them and force them to work.

Since we can't whip or club them anymore, ...well, many of the blacks don't seem to want to work as hard. They seem to prefer holding out their hands for the government handouts.

Baron Max
you andjb hey? like to drop te pair of you in a black community and have all the local hardnuts read your neverending racist emails and then sit back for a lynchin'

you and he are crawling vileness. te more you hate the mo it willcome to you

you'll see
 
duendy said:
you andjb hey? like to drop te pair of you in a black community and have all the local hardnuts read your neverending racist emails and then sit back for a lynchin'
If you are trying to say that blacks are not civil enuff to debate a issue and instead will resort to violence, that is already well known.
 
There has been only one Human "race" for some 30,000 years, according to mDNA analysis of our genome.

More people suffer from racism than theism.
 
J.B said:
If you are trying to say that blacks are not civil enuff to debate a issue and instead will resort to violence, that is already well known.
you aren't DEBATINGan issue. you are spreading evil racism which creates evil in the community
 
qwerty mob said:
There has been only one Human "race" for some 30,000 years, according to mDNA analysis of our genome.
RACIAL GROUPINGS MATCH GENETIC PROFILES, STANFORD STUDY FINDS
STANFORD -
Checking a box next to a racial/ethnic category gives several pieces of information about people - the continent where their ancestors were born, the possible color of their skin and perhaps something about their risk of different diseases. But a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine finds that the checked box also says something about a person's genetic background.

This work comes on the heels of several contradictory studies about the genetic basis of race. Some found that race is a social construct with no genetic basis while others suggested that clear genetic differences exist between people of different races.

What makes the current study, published in the February issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics, more conclusive is its size. The study is by far the largest, consisting of 3,636 people who all identified themselves as either white, African-American, East Asian or Hispanic. Of these, only five individuals had DNA that matched an ethnic group different than the box they checked at the beginning of the study. That's an error rate of 0.14 percent.

According to Neil Risch, PhD, a UCSF professor who led the study while he was professor of genetics at Stanford, the findings are particularly surprising given that people in both African-American and Hispanic ethnic groups often have a mixed background. "We might expect these individuals to cross several different genetic clusters," Risch said. This is especially true for Hispanics who are often a mix of Native American, white and African-American ancestry. But that's not what the study found. Instead, each self-identified racial/ethnic group clumped into the same genetic cluster.

The people in this research were all part of a study on the genetics of hypertension, recruited at 15 locations within the United States and in Taiwan. This broad distribution is important because it means that the results are representative of racial/ethnic groups throughout the United States rather than a small region that might not reflect the population nationwide.

For each person in the study, the researchers examined 326 DNA regions that tend to vary between people. These regions are not necessarily within genes, but are simply genetic signposts on chromosomes that come in a variety of different forms at the same location.

Without knowing how the participants had identified themselves, Risch and his team ran the results through a computer program that grouped individuals according to patterns of the 326 signposts. This analysis could have resulted in any number of different clusters, but only four clear groups turned up. And in each case the individuals within those clusters all fell within the same self-identified racial group.

"This shows that people's self-identified race/ethnicity is a nearly perfect indicator of their genetic background," Risch said.

http://mednews.stanford.edu/releases/2005/january/racial-data.htm

qwerty mob said:
More people suffer from racism than theism.
Are you suffering from racism?
 
A man who tried to rob a Katrina evacuee of his FEMA money early today by pointing a gun at him and throwing his daughter down a flight of stairs was killed when the evacuee managed to wrestle the gun away from him, police said.

Police are now on the hunt for the other two men involved in the attempted robbery, who ran off after the shooting.

The first man, known as "Mark," is a black male, 21 to 23, 5-foot 8-inches tall and 200 pounds. He has gold-plated grill teeth and dreadlocks, and was wearing a Raiders jacket and jeans at the robbery.

Norris identified the second man as Andrew J. Bell, who is a black male of the same height, 20 to 22, weighing about 180 pounds. He has sandy brown hair and facial hair on his chin. He wore a brown jacket and jeans Monday morning.
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/3605983.html
 
J.B said:
RACIAL GROUPINGS MATCH GENETIC PROFILES, STANFORD STUDY FINDS
STANFORD -
Checking a box next to a racial/ethnic category gives several pieces of information about people - the continent where their ancestors were born, the possible color of their skin and perhaps something about their risk of different diseases. But a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine finds that the checked box also says something about a person's genetic background.

This work comes on the heels of several contradictory studies about the genetic basis of race. Some found that race is a social construct with no genetic basis while others suggested that clear genetic differences exist between people of different races.

What makes the current study, published in the February issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics, more conclusive is its size. The study is by far the largest, consisting of 3,636 people who all identified themselves as either white, African-American, East Asian or Hispanic. Of these, only five individuals had DNA that matched an ethnic group different than the box they checked at the beginning of the study. That's an error rate of 0.14 percent.

According to Neil Risch, PhD, a UCSF professor who led the study while he was professor of genetics at Stanford, the findings are particularly surprising given that people in both African-American and Hispanic ethnic groups often have a mixed background. "We might expect these individuals to cross several different genetic clusters," Risch said. This is especially true for Hispanics who are often a mix of Native American, white and African-American ancestry. But that's not what the study found. Instead, each self-identified racial/ethnic group clumped into the same genetic cluster.

The people in this research were all part of a study on the genetics of hypertension, recruited at 15 locations within the United States and in Taiwan. This broad distribution is important because it means that the results are representative of racial/ethnic groups throughout the United States rather than a small region that might not reflect the population nationwide.

For each person in the study, the researchers examined 326 DNA regions that tend to vary between people. These regions are not necessarily within genes, but are simply genetic signposts on chromosomes that come in a variety of different forms at the same location.

Without knowing how the participants had identified themselves, Risch and his team ran the results through a computer program that grouped individuals according to patterns of the 326 signposts. This analysis could have resulted in any number of different clusters, but only four clear groups turned up. And in each case the individuals within those clusters all fell within the same self-identified racial group.

"This shows that people's self-identified race/ethnicity is a nearly perfect indicator of their genetic background," Risch said.

That's equivocation of the terms race and ethnicity, regardless of the size of the sampled population.

The genetic divisions within that study are relative to those social labels. Notice "other" and "Human" were not included.

What "race" are albinos? -is similarly meaningless.



J.B said:
Are you suffering from racism?

I suffer from neither mythology, nor misapprehension of labels.
 
Nagin is an idiot. Not because he is black, but because he is an idiot. New Orleans has always had a very black flavor, but I would remind those of you who forgot their history (or didn't bother with it) that those black were NOT originally slaves. They were free people of color delibrately induced to come to New Orleans because the climate was so like areas of Africa and France had too many colonies going at the time to fill them all. The ONLY requirement was that the Catholic faith must be claimed and practiced. Further, New Orleans is not just a tourist area and never has been. It is a very active and important port and, gee whiz, has a heavy portion of our oil refining.
 
In the words of the band Death

Built from blind faith
Passed down from self-induced fantasy
Turn a page to justify
Conjuring power - it opens wide
On seventh day, is that how it's done?
Twisting your eyes to perceive all that you want
To assume from ignorance
Inflicting wounds with your
cross-turned dagger


Inside crystal mountain
Evil takes its form
Inside crystal mountain
Commandments are reborn

All the traps are set to confine
All who get in the way of the divine
In sight and in mind of the hypocrite
A slave to the curse forever confined


Shatter the myth
Don't cut yourself
On your words against dreams made of steel
Stronger any faith
That inflicts pain and fear, is that how it's done?
Twisting your eyes to perceive all that you want
To assume from ignorance
Inflicting wounds with your cross-turned dagger

Inside crystal mountain
Evil takes its form
Inside crystal mountain
Commandments are reborn

:cool:
 
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