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Showing content with the highest reputation on 03/03/2021 in all areas

  1. Your post isn't coherent. Dr. Seuss's estate manager decided not to sell 6 of his books. It's perfectly fine for a business to stop selling a book, and this is a good enough reason to do it, not that they need any reason at all. Nobody burned books to make it happen. This is feedback they received from teachers and students. Nobody is confiscating any Dr. Seuss books. Literally no one is harmed by this in any way. You should think of what you're getting annoyed by and get annoyed by things that actually hurt people.
    6 points
  2. good for you. But I’m sticking with the people who’ve painstakingly researched the problem.
    6 points
  3. i wake up in bidens america and don't fear what stupid s#!t he did overnight like i did with the last administration
    5 points
  4. Or to ignore the double standard in Hollywood. The Mandalorian lady made a terrible comparison to the Holocaust and lost her job. Celebrities on the left have compared Trump to Hitler (also a comparison to the Holocaust, and equally as terrible/offensive) and they're celebrated.
    4 points
  5. Relax, we're six months from games so of course off-field topics will be discussed ad nauseam. @rocketlb's summary was solid. Sounds like the former players are going in with the right focus. Hopefully the players can pick up some intangible traits that will lead to on-field success in one way or another.
    4 points
  6. Because they are different. Better personal decisions would undoubtedly help the situation for those engulfed in a bad culture. Whether that's blacks in the inner cities, or whites in poverty stricken Appalachia.
    3 points
  7. Oh yeah. Public pressure and/or the current climate of cancel culture DEFINITELY didn't play a role here. (wink wink).
    3 points
  8. Man, if there were only some connection to keeping a race in a constant state of poverty, and a cultural history of families being torn apart.
    3 points
  9. No. I think that some cultures are better at personal accountability than others.
    3 points
  10. If Trump isn't criminally tied to the insurrection, we have failed as a country. He is the common denominator in everything posted above. He is the cause, the agent, the catalyst, the motivation, and the voice behind it all. It only points out how far gone the GOP is when they still embrace a guy that should be in jail.
    3 points
  11. What does that even mean? Sure looked like it ended a year ago: https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bbc.com/news/amp/world-asia-51689443 That article reads like he tried but Mitch didn't want to (shocker) and that Biden plans on dragging his feet about finishing it. Guess we're going to split hairs here.
    3 points
  12. Hey it just occurred to me: does it make a difference if we can trace current injustice back to slavery, or is the fact that there's current injustice damning enough? Anyway, it turns out the slavery link is not an uncommon theory, one of many factors to be considered. Here's one of the more clear-headed and academic, Archy. Dig in! https://cepr.org/sites/default/files/sugar_16_04_2019.pdf
    3 points
  13. It's just easier to pretend the ridiculous cancel culture doesn't exist than it is to admit we've let it go too far.
    3 points
  14. Signed up to get the JJ shot...one shot only.
    3 points
  15. Cancelling Dr Seuss? Whaat? Why? Signaling.. woke vocabulary.. Bernie, Obama, and Biden is spot on. Biden's America (and the left)..
    3 points
  16. Media everywhere do exactly that and get praised for it. And as BRB said, it's fine to portray the American stereotype. I doubt it. Cancel culture is driven by a largely white upper class. Often they have to work hard to find a non-white person who will say he's offended.
    2 points
  17. And every time anyone talks about Black people facing any kind of adverse circumstances at all you talk about Black culture so why are acting like you think the 2 are different?
    2 points
  18. Precisely. And I think we can find examples of it in a lot of major cities. Take Omaha. A lot of Black families that migrated into the city were largely only able to find housing and affordable housing opportunities in what is now North Omaha. A huge portion of that community also worked at the meatpacking plants. The area was already experiencing crime issues prior to the meatpacking closures (because of income levels and a lack of equitable opportunities), but those eventual closures sent huge portions of that community into a poverty and crime spiral. To this day, North Omaha is still a) predominantly black and b) poverty/crime ridden.
    2 points
  19. Most of the movies and TV shows you watched as a kid contained racist, misogynistic, and homophobic content. Sometimes it was just insensitive, ignorant stuff. Sometimes it was the punchline to a joke. Your childhood books, Dr. Seuss or not, probably also contained a lot of questionable material by today's standards. Sometimes I watch my old favorites with my kids, and then the inappropriate joke that I forgot about comes up. So we often pause it and have a discussion about why that was inappropriate, why we don't repeat those kinds of comments, and talk about why people used to think it was okay to include that stuff. You can learn from these things without necessarily throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
    2 points
  20. Institutionalized poverty. And then when a Black community becomes successful as they did with the Black Wall Street in Tulsa, it gets burnt down in the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 - 100 years ago. Tulsa only in the past years has come to grips with this and even today, north Tulsa is the place of greatest poverty due primarily by what happened 100 years ago.
    2 points
  21. I'm still not sure why people are up in arms about what private companies decide to do with the product. What's next Fox News - "McDonalds changed their Nuggies recipe because they hate America. The old nuggies have been canceled". Who gives a s#!t? Stop buying potato heads then Gym Jordan. Good lord.
    2 points
  22. Yep. We agree on this 100% (except for the part about there being no way to break it). It's a vicious cycle in a lot of poor communities, not just black.
    2 points
  23. I think he runs but finds out relatively quickly in the primary season that he won’t win.
    2 points
  24. Do you think one racial group is better or worse at personal accountability than another?
    2 points
  25. A picture of our strange culture for sure. It seems this is the case with many far left causes. Parents are great unless parents stand in the way of indoctrination of the youth for left wing causes. Teenagers need parental permission for most everything but yet if they want to have an abortion or any other activity that planned parenthood could provide, then parents are often squeezed out of the equation. There is even talk of lowering the voting age to 16 by some on the left. Yes, 16 year olds are really in tune with political issues and cannot be easily manipulated If the parent is left of center, then by all means they have the right to share those values with their children. Granted there are those cases, (seems one has to always mention the exception to the rule) in which a far right parent or a far left parent are endangering their child with values that aren't acceptable. But the vast majority, right or left, are doing the best they can to raise their kids and help them to grow up to be productive people in our society. Govt should assist those parents and not make it more difficult. I don't want to bash what some well meaning people may want to do and there are exceptions where parents aren't acting like parents (looking at you Kelly Anne Conway), but I think parents rights should stand above the right of the child and govt should protect the parent's position in society and reinforce it and not take away. If the family is the cornerstone of our society, then it should be supported in every way possible and not made weaker. I don't care if you are a liberal or conservative or moderate parent, religious or not. Families are where most societal values are communicated to the next generation. And let me add, most values communicated are neither left or right,...most are common sense.
    2 points
  26. Where does personal accountability fall on this list?
    2 points
  27. He is a liberal hack as noted by his history in politics and reporting history. He’s just a little less of a hack than the rest. Tapper quite tweeting a twitter rando with 200 followers is gold.
    2 points
  28. The Biggest breakdowns began with the advent of the Great Society Welfare Programs. African Americans had larger % of intact families while have also having larger poverty rates prior to the 1960’s. Poverty rates have steadily declined while single parent households have steadily increased. Same increase has happened to the white community only at a faster rate. Poverty plays a large role in creating/keeping single family households but it can’t explain the Black family breakdown rate.
    2 points
  29. Large media orgs have been doing this for decades. Stelter is awful at his job.
    2 points
  30. What semi-competent person couldn’t see this coming? China Joe has a real problem on his hands now and he’s gonna need to get serious about this in between bites of his oatmeal mush. I hope whoever is in charge will adjust the narrative and policy to get across the message that we will enforce the borders and come to the US in a legal manner.
    2 points
  31. Federal Government Policy is to blame in my opinion
    2 points
  32. Would you care to share that painstaking research that shows slavery caused broken family units in the 1900’s to current day so the rest of us can learn from it?
    2 points
  33. Why is he not allowed to stay where he wants? If it’s so illegal for SS to pay rates and stay at his property, then SS Director needs to have a nutsack and tell Trump COS those properties are a no go because of funding. They have their own line item budget correct? If so then they have a say so.
    2 points
  34. It does Seems pretty hypocritical for those Congressmen/women to complain about proxy voting then turning right around and doing it to attend a conference. I’m sure they could have worked out a zoom speech or pre-recorded speech if they were supposed to attend CPAC. Wish all of them would do their day job before going to political events or fundraising events.
    2 points
  35. Yesterday (March 1st) during his normal segment on Severe & Benning, Jay Foreman explained what his role is and why he's doing it. Essentially, he outline your former point as his main purpose. He expressed that he was lucky enough to have some former husker players (from the 80's) give him some life advice while he was playing. He said he wants to give back to the program by offering up his life experiences and make himself available to them as a resource. Obviously, it's probably easier to just listen to what he said rather than read a brief synopsis from some random board member. He starts talking about it at the 4:20 mark:
    2 points
  36. Well.....not exactly. I mean, yeah, slavery took place all over the world, including Africans enslaving neighboring tribes, a fact that often gets pulled up to distract from the current issue. So while reparations may not be the answer, there is still justice to be found for slavery, and all involved are not gone. Systemic discrimination in wealth, property, equity, and broken family units continue in the Black community in a way they don't in other minorities without slave histories, and the people who will happily continue that marginalization have risen to the highest seats of power in America, including national news media that clutch their pearls about last summer's black lives matter protests while downplaying January's white supremacist coup attempt and, wait for it.....blaming it on leftwing instigators. I'm against Reparations because they allow too many people to claim Black people are demanding too much.
    2 points
  37. It's not really cancel culture if the school districts are pulling the book after the publisher decided to stop printing it.
    1 point
  38. Hey, if the season goes south, I'll take a case of Runza's for consolation. Wish we could get those in Tulsa. Yes, those traits you mentioned are the ingredients for a successful team and were a trade mark of those 1990s teams.
    1 point
  39. yes it is a revolving door - If your party is in - you have a spot in the admin. If your party is out - you are either at a think tank or a talking head.
    1 point
  40. Hallmark will be in CF, Anderson at 3B, Schwellenbach at SS, and Matthews at 2B. Apparently a battle at 1B but I'd expect Banjoff to win that. Chick will DH and Everitt at C but I'd expect Roskum will get a far amount of games as well at C and DH. I'd also expect Acker and Mojo to round out the OF corner spots. Starting rotation looking like Povich, Hroch, Shanaman and Bunz as game 4 starter.
    1 point
  41. Its the other intangibles a point guard brings. Very similar how one quarterback makes an offense good but another makes the same offense look great. The biggest recruiting win, imo, for roy williams at ku was jaque vaughn. I honestly feel he shot williams career upwards.
    1 point
  42. The actual quote.... “I’m hoping the Big Ten has to modify their system for us,” Frost said confidently, resulting in a loud cheer from the group of current and former players and NU administration. Bottom line, for better or worse, Frost was hoping that the B1G would have to "modify" "adjust""change" "alter" "adjust" etc their respective "system" "structure""organization" "method" "technique" etc........It is what it is. Had he been successful, we would all love the quote. As it is, we are 12-20 and no one has adjusted anything. Other than to get us on their schedule.....I'm glad he said it when he did. Showed courage. Bo said the same thing..........To date, no one has been fearful of NU since we have joined. Do I want Frost to succeed? Hell yes. Do I have some serious concerns going into 2021? Hell yes. I think we are still 2022 from seeing what we have. And while it sucks, it is what it is. I'm just tired of the "culture", look what he inherited, they didn't even have strength training excuse etc....It's his team. And no fan wants him to fail.
    1 point
  43. Can someone point me to my 650,000 in wealth I am supposed to have? I must have misplaced it.
    1 point
  44. Dude - the effects of years of abuse still resonates with todays minorities. They deserve an apology. We should all recognize it. https://news.stanford.edu/2017/06/16/report-finds-significant-racial-ethnic-disparities/ https://facultydevelopment.massgeneral.org/cfd/pdf/ARTICLE-TruthAboutMentoringMinorities-RaceMatters-HBR.pdf https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2015/07/23/as-a-black-man-its-hard-to-catch-a-cab-research-shows-even-white-people-know-that/ https://hbr.org/2001/04/race-matters https://www.propublica.org/article/education-discrimination-montana-reservation-schools-favor-whites-over-native-americans https://www.aauw.org/2015/09/03/native-women-gender-pay-gap/ https://ips-dc.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Ever-Growing-Gap-CFED_IPS-Final-2.pdf The last link is a report that is pretty good - looking at how the lack of housing opportunities in the 40's impacted ownership but also overall wealth, how the exclusion of some members of our country from social security (mostly farmers and domestic workers - mostly of color, the lack of a minimum wage for workers of color. The impact of the GI Bill on minorities, the FHA discrimination, and the list goes on and on. To say it's over and was done long ago is putting your head in the sand.
    1 point
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