What makes our community the most vulnerable is that we don't have men in the homes. Whenever you read a story that some little boy or girl is being manhandled, woman have hands put on her, etc, I've rarely (and I can't think of one) where there was a father in the home.
Teachers and school resource officers know better than to put hands on a kid if they know he got a pops. The last thing they want. There was a matter somewhere in the south a few years ago where a school officer picked up a little black girl in her chair and slammed it.
At the school board meeting a brotha who looked like he could play linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens was heated AF. Told the school board if he hears of one more story and if its any of his kids, he's coming down there and he ain't talking. They got quiet AF. He was passionate and them white folks knew he was about the business.
Only one case that I know of where a cop shot a black woman in front of her man, father, etc. Breonna Taylor and that brotha shot back. Cops have shot a black man in front of his woman but never the other way around. Even a white cop knows any man would snap if you f*ck with his woman or kids in front of him.
I've seen black people shot in front of the mama or big mama who called the cops because she can't handle him. But not a man.
Point is they know 80 percent of our women and kids don't have a protector at hand.
That being said, they don't give a f*ck and the sad part is most of us in denial. We all know it on subconscious level but we act like we don't and have our people in all kinds of situations where they harmed. Also, not enough head of households has that talk and has a plan for their child in case they get jammed up.
The KCPD needs to be sued. The blacks there gotta get together now for their own safety and survival and if they don't they are spiritually dead. Point blank. EVERY police officer that told them it wasn't anything needs to be on the jumbotron there, and something done. EVERY one.
Cut the people who supposed to get it a motherf*cking check.
What makes our community the most vulnerable is that we don't have men in the homes. Whenever you read a story that some little boy or girl is being manhandled, woman have hands put on her, etc, I've rarely (and I can't think of one) where there was a father in the home.
Teachers and school resource officers know better than to put hands on a kid if they know he got a pops. The last thing they want. There was a matter somewhere in the south a few years ago where a school officer picked up a little black girl in her chair and slammed it.
At the school board meeting a brotha who looked like he could play linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens was heated AF. Told the school board if he hears of one more story and if its any of his kids, he's coming down there and he ain't talking. They got quiet AF. He was passionate and them white folks knew he was about the business.
Only one case that I know of where a cop shot a black woman in front of her man, father, etc. Breonna Taylor and that brotha shot back. Cops have shot a black man in front of his woman but never the other way around. Even a white cop knows any man would snap if you f*ck with his woman or kids in front of him.
I've seen black people shot in front of the mama or big mama who called the cops because she can't handle him. But not a man.
Point is they know 80 percent of our women and kids don't have a protector at hand.
That being said, they don't give a f*ck and the sad part is most of us in denial. We all know it on subconscious level but we act like we don't and have our people in all kinds of situations where they harmed. Also, not enough head of households has that talk and has a plan for their child in case they get jammed up.
The KCPD needs to be sued. The blacks there gotta get together now for their own safety and survival and if they don't they are spiritually dead. Point blank. EVERY police officer that told them it wasn't anything needs to be on the jumbotron there, and something done. EVERY one.
Cut the people who supposed to get it a motherf*cking check.
Very true. I remember some girls were trying to jump me when I was little and they came up on the porch yelling my name. My dad came out the front door and kicked one of the girls clear off the porch and told them not to come back over his house. I never had an issue after that.