Sexyy Red's Sex Tape Leak Is The Chickens Coming Home to Roost
She may be a victim for the alleged leak but is she worthy of empathy and protection? Common sense says "no" and we explain why.
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Empathy? Yeah I don’t think leaking someone’s private life like that is cool even if I don’t like the person, which is the case with Sexy Red.Sexyy Red's Sex Tape Leak Is The Chickens Coming Home to Roost
She may be a victim for the alleged leak but is she worthy of empathy and protection? Common sense says "no" and we explain why.www.6zeros.netIs Sexyy Red a Victim?
Yes and no. She is a victim for having an intimate moment allegedly "leaked" but is she deserving of empathy and protection? Not in our opinion. She professes degeneracy, hangs around other professors of degeneracy, and now has to reap the consequences of said actions. It is no different than your run-of-mill thug rapper succumbing to the violence they rap incessantly about. Do not frolic with the bottom of society and then expect the strait-laced to come save you.
I thought Jay was going to go into victim blaming but I'm glad he didn't. I can get behind the "She's a victim but she is out on the streets dolo" tip because it's true. She is playing a game that leaves you protectionless.Empathy? Yeah I don’t think leaking someone’s private life like that is cool even if I don’t like the person, which is the case with Sexy Red.
Protection? How? I hate to answer a question with a question but this is a person whose sole image is at far odds with what most of us are for. I don’t know how we could offer her protection and how effective it would be. The best we can do for her is to give advice and education about black history and our current state of affairs but the Hollywood machine would never allow her to change. Verdict: she’s done!
The protection part comes from the dialogue that ensues when SOME women promote independence but then want to switch back to chivalry when independence starts baring consequence.Empathy? Yeah I don’t think leaking someone’s private life like that is cool even if I don’t like the person, which is the case with Sexy Red.
Protection? How? I hate to answer a question with a question but this is a person whose sole image is at far odds with what most of us are for. I don’t know how we could offer her protection and how effective it would be. The best we can do for her is to give advice and education about black history and our current state of affairs but the Hollywood machine would never allow her to change. Verdict: she’s done!
Amen! These ladies wanna live all wild out there and the second their life choices smack them in their faces, they cry about it. I cut ties with a lot of female friends over this bs. I don't want the drama in my life. Have enough to deal with as is! If you wanna live that life, you deal with your own damn consequences.The protection part comes from the dialogue that ensues when SOME women promote independence but then want to switch back to chivalry when independence starts baring consequence.
I fully agree with your point of not having empathy for individuals that willingly put themselves in certain situations but looking at the bigger picture we’re talking about individuals in an industry (Hollywood) not controlled by us and the powers that be only put out a certain black image, pertaining to black female rappers it’s just going to to be an ignorant image. I wanted to bring that up because the compassion I’d have for a regular sister whose shot vs a millionaire that chooses bad company is different, we can’t treat everyone with a harsh hand we must educate when we can.The protection part comes from the dialogue that ensues when SOME women promote independence but then want to switch back to chivalry when independence starts baring consequence.
Like for instance, I always get flack because I have no empathy or sympathy for the Meg the Stallion shooting. People were talking about “protect Black women” but I’m like “wasn’t she a savage” just a minute ago?
Every dude I knew that was savage knew that you could get beat up, shot or locked up behind it and those that did chalked it up to the game. So long story short, if you wanna be out there ripping and running the streets talking about the color of your butt hole and how your homies have the choppers and you gon sick them on the haters be ready for the consequences of that.
We have this horrible dynamic where SOME women wanna act like thugs but then want to become damsel in distresses when it’s time to pay the cost. If you wanna be a thug go out and do your thang but don’t try to shame respectable society when it don’t work out how you think it will and no one is there to save you.
It's not about policing women's body, it's about respect and order. You can't have a functional and thriving community with everybody doing what they WANT to do.I don't like when Men try to police Women's bodies. If she wants to twerk let her, it doesn't mean she deserves to have her sex tape leaked.
It's not about policing women's body, it's about respect and order. You can't have a functional and thriving community with everybody doing what they WANT to.
I 100% agree men should be held accountable just as much as women.How do you create order? By policing. So you are wanting to police how we use our bodies. I don’t see any talk about law and order when male rappers talk about all the hoes they have. The rules should apply evenly across the community.
I respect that you believe both sexes need to be held to the same standard. It doesn't mean I agree with your standard but I do have respect for your desire for equality.I 100% agree men should be held accountable just as much as women.
You create order by having a code, something people can use as a guide to deal with daily issues effectively. And a code would deal with everybody equally, just like women have obligations, men have theirs too.
I talked about that in the article but in the end it does not absolve the agents from their misdeeds. Willful or unwilling participation is still participation which I know you don't disagree with...just saying it for whoever is reading. To your point about regular sister vs. millionaire/celebrity:I fully agree with your point of not having empathy for individuals that willingly put themselves in certain situations but looking at the bigger picture we’re talking about individuals in an industry (Hollywood) not controlled by us and the powers that be only put out a certain black image, pertaining to black female rappers it’s just going to to be an ignorant image. I wanted to bring that up because the compassion I’d have for a regular sister whose shot vs a millionaire that chooses bad company is different, we can’t treat everyone with a harsh hand we must educate when we can.
But bringing it back to your point, all these entertainers are agents of white supremacy and should be treated as enemies if they refuse to recognize that.
Well not exactly equal, men should be held even more accountable than women because men are the head of the relationship.I respect that you believe both sexes need to be held to the same standard. It doesn't mean I agree with your standard but I do have respect for your desire for equality.
She got some nice assets but too bad they're tatted and torn.That's a bad name; She's not even sexy first off.
And she isn't a redbone.
I guess this is a case of she identifies as a sexy redbone even though she is just a ugly azz chick!