CobbVol
Junior Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2006
- Messages
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Can’t speak for Christians but with Messianic Judaism the man is the head of the household.Tell me you’re clueless about foundational Christian doctrine without telling me you’re clueless about foundational Christian doctrine.
They will cling to anything to blame except the guns.
In summary, most everyday people share more common interests than differences.I have never understood this pov.
Do you have time to explain why you think this way?
Without the civil rights movement, blacks would still be sitting in the back of the bus, eating in a secluded area, going to different bathrooms, going to different schools and not having a vote. Your lack of ignorance comes from a lack of understanding the nuance within the context. Which Civil Rights activists made those comments? We're you even around in the 1960s? There are still many blacks alive who had to sit in the back of the bus, eat at a different table and drink from a different water fountain.lol your reasoning are two random quotes with zero context? Plenty of civil rights activists have made the claim that the civil rights movement harmed the black community in terms of business ownership and education.
Would you like to provide context to his quotes or do you prefer to simply misrepresent others and live in ignorance
BREAKING NEWS!!!I'm celebrating
BREAKING NEWS!!!
K-town Vol Fan admits celebrating Kirk's death!!!
See how taking a few words from your sentence stating you are in fact not celebrating can change the entire outlook? Quit cherry picking words someone said from an entire conversation to fit a narrative you, not the person who said them, wants.
I see the advantage for political elites to divide. Emotional "purchasing" of votes.In summary, most everyday people share more common interests than differences.
Political and economic elites have long recognized that division is a tool of control. By framing politics as a perpetual left-versus-right struggle, they divert attention from shared economic challenges of the working majority.
While we debate and fight over issues ultra wealthy hype up, elites quietly consolidate wealth and influence, ensuring the system of inequality remains unchallenged.
Without the civil rights movement, blacks would still be sitting in the back of the bus, eating in a secluded area, going to different bathrooms, going to different schools and not having a vote. Your lack of ignorance comes from a lack of understanding the nuance within the context. Which Civil Rights activists made those comments? We're you even around in the 1960s? There are still many blacks alive who had to sit in the back of the bus, eat at a different table and drink from a different water fountain.
Would you disagree if I said the CRM expedited those things but they would have come to fruition naturally even without the CRM?Without the civil rights movement, blacks would still be sitting in the back of the bus, eating in a secluded area, going to different bathrooms, going to different schools and not having a vote.