- Nov 20, 2007
- 87,866
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I told you I read the posts. My previous reply still stands.[thread="615018"]Quote:[/thread]
The very fact that you're in here complaining about Affirmative Action is evidence of what I just said. The fact that you're in here talking about grants and scholarships and your disadvantages is ridiculous. Like bringing it up was just dumb all under the guise of this is my personal story and this is how I overcame it. Save it for an afterschool special.
You should've stopped typing after "I don't pretend to know what it's like to be a young Black male growing up in America today"
Also, I'm not selectively reading anything. I actually refrained from posting earlier so I could read all of your posts and here you out given you've been on some similar **** in other threads. Only difference here now is you think you're saying something new about this don't live in the past, overcome your situation to achieve your goals rhetoric as if this is the first time a black person has been told that. Like I said I can't tell if it's extreme naivety on your part or insanely glaring ignorance.
Did you see this post that I responded to?
When you live in a lower socioeconomic area, you are less likely to finish school. Numbers don't lie. A lot of it has nothing to do with level of motivation, it has a lot to do with access.
I grew up in a lower socioeconomic area and went to the same schools as many blacks growing up. I wasn't complaining about affirmative action, I was merely pointing out that "access" isn't the end all be all to whether someone finishes school. Education isn't and shouldn't be limited to what's taught in class, it begins at home. If I'm the one being naive or ignorant, why don't you educate me and explain how racism plays a role in whether someone finishes school or not.
You almost 40 bruh if you seriously want to be educated on that specific point a convo on NT won't suffice. Just asking alone makes me think you don't know what institutionalized racism is. You over here talking about the minority grants and scholarships you didn't get, sorry I aint gonna be that guy to entertain that like I said I can see this is leaning more towards ignorance than naivety. I'd suggest you take the time to join a big brother program in a lower socioeconomic area or perhaps ask your former peers that you went to school with growing up so you can maybe open your eyes on how it was different for them. What you're being naive or ignorant about is your response in general. Perhaps you didn't get that in my previous replies where I said that and why.
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