“Is it cuz I is black?” Will “Transracial” become the new Transgender?

Red Sky at Morning

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Mar 15, 2017
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14,458
Long before the trans agenda was a twinkle in Lady Ga-Ga’s lightning bolt decorated eye, Ali G satirically asked the question….

9D386B9E-548A-4A7E-8A6D-F89D4B9E0084.jpeg

Showing my age a bit, I watched Enter the Dragon as a kid and thought Mr Williams was cool. I loved the whole black culture thing and resented being born a blonde haired English kid. I think I must have sulked about it for a time, but I eventually made peace with my Anglo-Saxon genetics.


But what if, instead of the woke agenda backing the gender studies mantra of becoming the sex you believe yourself to be, another agenda had emerged?

What if kids were told there were a number of races out there and some kids just don’t feel comfortable with the race “assigned to them at birth?”. When filling an a government form on ethnic background, why can’t I tick the box of the race I identify with??

In asking this question I anticipate opposition. I’m not just doing it to inflame argument, but to ask the question:

If it is foolish for me to expect others to refer to me (or Ali G) as black, despite my (temporary) rejection of my own ethnicity, why is the new cultural orthodoxy to modify the English language and pronouns to accommodate those who believe they were born in the wrong sex considered sensible?
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
2,864
Long before the trans agenda was a twinkle in Lady Ga-Ga’s lightning bolt decorated eye, Ali G satirically asked the question….

View attachment 73127

Showing my age a bit, I watched Enter the Dragon as a kid and thought Mr Williams was cool. I loved the whole black culture thing and resented being born a blonde haired English kid. I think I must have sulked about it for a time, but I eventually made peace with my Anglo-Saxon genetics.


But what if, instead of the woke agenda backing the gender studies mantra of becoming the sex you believe yourself to be, another agenda had emerged?

What if kids were told there were a number of races out there and some kids just don’t feel comfortable with the race “assigned to them at birth?”. In asking this question I anticipate opposition. I’m not just doing it to inflame argument, but to ask the question:

If it is foolish for me to expect others to refer to me (or Ali G) as black, despite my (temporary) rejection of my own ethnicity, why is the new cultural orthodoxy to modify the English language and pronouns to accommodate those who believe they were born in the wrong sex considered sensible?
You can always change your name to " Black Sky at Morning" so you can be culturally relevant ?
 

Sibi

Star
Joined
Aug 11, 2021
Messages
1,563
Long before the trans agenda was a twinkle in Lady Ga-Ga’s lightning bolt decorated eye, Ali G satirically asked the question….

View attachment 73127

Showing my age a bit, I watched Enter the Dragon as a kid and thought Mr Williams was cool. I loved the whole black culture thing and resented being born a blonde haired English kid. I think I must have sulked about it for a time, but I eventually made peace with my Anglo-Saxon genetics.


But what if, instead of the woke agenda backing the gender studies mantra of becoming the sex you believe yourself to be, another agenda had emerged?

What if kids were told there were a number of races out there and some kids just don’t feel comfortable with the race “assigned to them at birth?”. When filling an a government form on ethnic background, why can’t I tick the box of the race I identify with??

In asking this question I anticipate opposition. I’m not just doing it to inflame argument, but to ask the question:

If it is foolish for me to expect others to refer to me (or Ali G) as black, despite my (temporary) rejection of my own ethnicity, why is the new cultural orthodoxy to modify the English language and pronouns to accommodate those who believe they were born in the wrong sex considered sensible?
There are many people who wanted to be called by a different race, like Rachel Dolezal, Carrie Bourassa, and Elizabeth Warren. Many people are mixed ethnicities, why can't they be called by what they identify with? There is also a lot of cultural baggage that comes with being any ethnicity. People who grew up with that baggage will probably resent someone who identifies with but did not experience the same issues growing up. In Elizabeth Warren's case she was able to get ahead due to her minority status.

I still and always will think that having someone referred to as their imagined sex is ludicrous. Forcing a person to lie for social acceptance is evil. I don't encounter trans people but if I did I would not use their preferred pronoun like I would not renounce my faith if they demanded that.
 
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I'm willing to call Pocahontas a lying dog faced pony soldier and if that is politically incorrect how about just white trash?
 

Sibi

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Aug 11, 2021
Messages
1,563
Apparently we all want to be black.


The Top 6 Things Black Women Have That Other Women Want
In the world of co-opting, appropriation, Iggy Azaleas and Kardashians, it seems as though, in the words of the great Paul Mooney, everyone wants to be a black woman until it’s time to actually “be a black woman.” I get it.​
Black women are the s—t. And we have been since the beginning of time. Black women have fought hard to be accepted in society, past and present. Black women are trendsetters and revolutionaries. So I understand why other women try their hardest to emulate us. But when it comes to imitating and appropriating, they all fail. There’s this thing called “authenticity.” You either have it or you don’t. And some women try really hard to “have it.”​
Here are the top 6 things black women have that other women want:​
1. Lips​
Back in the day, big lips were made fun of, but nowadays women are going to extremes to have their lips inflated for a fuller, more succulent look. It all started with collagen injections, but now there’s a simpler way to give your mouth that extra boost.​
With products like CandyLipz, all you have to do is take a plastic suction-cup device and put your lips in it while it squeezes the life out of them. And voilà—you’re walking around looking as if you got stung by a billion bees and lived to tell the tale. But you may not want to leave the house for a few days, because the warning that comes along with the device is that it can cause bruising and redness.​
2. Darker Skin​
I truly feel sorry for the women who spend countless hours tanning in the sun and at tanning salons. You have to wonder if they realize that in 20 years they’ll end up looking more like a California raisin than a tanner version of their former selves.​
Those of us who were blessed with melanin and brown skin scoff at those walking around looking like “Tan Mom.” Then you have those women who realize that tanning isn’t great for their skin and resort to spray-on tans—only to end up being mistaken for Oompa Loompa Boehner.​
3. Ass, Ass, Ass​
Now, this is a tricky subject. Because we all know there are plenty of black women who have resorted to this ass trickery (I see you, Nicki Minaj). Women all over the world are spending fortunes and risking their lives to get fatter asses. And half of the time they don’t even look real. You have women with these tiny-ass waists and Hottentot Venus asses.​
Whether they’re getting ass implants in some seedy hotel room or spending thousands of dollars and heading to the Dominican Republic, everyone from the Kardashians to Iggy Azalea is inflating her rear end. All along, while growing up, some black women had to endure taunting and ridicule for their grandiose derrieres.​
And it’s worth repeating that inflated asses don’t even look real.​
4. Braids, Dreads and Afros​
When Zendaya Coleman wore dreads, some said her hair looked as if it smelled like weed and patchouli. When a certain sister-in-law of Kanye West wore dreads, they called it “trendy.” When nonblack women co-opt hairstyles traditionally worn by black women, they’re always called fashionable. Remember last year during Fashion Week and the baby-hair debacle? How long have black women and young black girls been sporting baby hair? Black women in cornrows equals ghetto. Nonblack women in cornrows equals trendsetters.​
Next thing you know, nonblack women will be out there rocking kinky, curly Afros. Wait, there’s already a tutorial on how they can get “Afro” hair.​
5. Black Men​
Once you go black, you’re now a Kardashian. Back in the day, nonblack women would have to sneak around just to get their “jungle fever” on. Nowadays, there’s no more sneaking around. Whether they’re truly into black men or just want to see if the “myths” are true, nonblack women are snatching up black men left and right. I just have one request: Stay away from Idris Elba. He’s mine.​
As someone who has dated all types of ethnicities for the majority of her dating life, I truly don’t see anything wrong with it. But miss me with giving interracial dating corny names like “swirling.” Also miss me with putting down your own race to justify why you’re dating another. And that goes for everyone.​
6. Survival Skills​
You can knock us down, but we’ll get back up. We have Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks. These women have paved the way for today’s black woman. They laid the groundwork. What some people refer to as “leaning in,” we call living.​
I can already see the comments section, so I’ll save you some time. OMG, you’re racist: No, I’m not; I have white friends. Well, black women straighten their hair and wear weaves. I guess they’re trying to be white, too: You’d think by now someone would come up with a more original retort. I hate this site. It’s always talking about race: Well, maybe you’d feel more comfortable over at Stormfront?​
 
Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
2,864
Apparently we all want to be black.


The Top 6 Things Black Women Have That Other Women Want
In the world of co-opting, appropriation, Iggy Azaleas and Kardashians, it seems as though, in the words of the great Paul Mooney, everyone wants to be a black woman until it’s time to actually “be a black woman.” I get it.​
Black women are the s—t. And we have been since the beginning of time. Black women have fought hard to be accepted in society, past and present. Black women are trendsetters and revolutionaries. So I understand why other women try their hardest to emulate us. But when it comes to imitating and appropriating, they all fail. There’s this thing called “authenticity.” You either have it or you don’t. And some women try really hard to “have it.”​
Here are the top 6 things black women have that other women want:​
1. Lips​
Back in the day, big lips were made fun of, but nowadays women are going to extremes to have their lips inflated for a fuller, more succulent look. It all started with collagen injections, but now there’s a simpler way to give your mouth that extra boost.​
With products like CandyLipz, all you have to do is take a plastic suction-cup device and put your lips in it while it squeezes the life out of them. And voilà—you’re walking around looking as if you got stung by a billion bees and lived to tell the tale. But you may not want to leave the house for a few days, because the warning that comes along with the device is that it can cause bruising and redness.​
2. Darker Skin​
I truly feel sorry for the women who spend countless hours tanning in the sun and at tanning salons. You have to wonder if they realize that in 20 years they’ll end up looking more like a California raisin than a tanner version of their former selves.​
Those of us who were blessed with melanin and brown skin scoff at those walking around looking like “Tan Mom.” Then you have those women who realize that tanning isn’t great for their skin and resort to spray-on tans—only to end up being mistaken for Oompa Loompa Boehner.​
3. Ass, Ass, Ass​
Now, this is a tricky subject. Because we all know there are plenty of black women who have resorted to this ass trickery (I see you, Nicki Minaj). Women all over the world are spending fortunes and risking their lives to get fatter asses. And half of the time they don’t even look real. You have women with these tiny-ass waists and Hottentot Venus asses.​
Whether they’re getting ass implants in some seedy hotel room or spending thousands of dollars and heading to the Dominican Republic, everyone from the Kardashians to Iggy Azalea is inflating her rear end. All along, while growing up, some black women had to endure taunting and ridicule for their grandiose derrieres.​
And it’s worth repeating that inflated asses don’t even look real.​
4. Braids, Dreads and Afros​
When Zendaya Coleman wore dreads, some said her hair looked as if it smelled like weed and patchouli. When a certain sister-in-law of Kanye West wore dreads, they called it “trendy.” When nonblack women co-opt hairstyles traditionally worn by black women, they’re always called fashionable. Remember last year during Fashion Week and the baby-hair debacle? How long have black women and young black girls been sporting baby hair? Black women in cornrows equals ghetto. Nonblack women in cornrows equals trendsetters.​
Next thing you know, nonblack women will be out there rocking kinky, curly Afros. Wait, there’s already a tutorial on how they can get “Afro” hair.​
5. Black Men​
Once you go black, you’re now a Kardashian. Back in the day, nonblack women would have to sneak around just to get their “jungle fever” on. Nowadays, there’s no more sneaking around. Whether they’re truly into black men or just want to see if the “myths” are true, nonblack women are snatching up black men left and right. I just have one request: Stay away from Idris Elba. He’s mine.​
As someone who has dated all types of ethnicities for the majority of her dating life, I truly don’t see anything wrong with it. But miss me with giving interracial dating corny names like “swirling.” Also miss me with putting down your own race to justify why you’re dating another. And that goes for everyone.​
6. Survival Skills​
You can knock us down, but we’ll get back up. We have Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks. These women have paved the way for today’s black woman. They laid the groundwork. What some people refer to as “leaning in,” we call living.​
I can already see the comments section, so I’ll save you some time. OMG, you’re racist: No, I’m not; I have white friends. Well, black women straighten their hair and wear weaves. I guess they’re trying to be white, too: You’d think by now someone would come up with a more original retort. I hate this site. It’s always talking about race: Well, maybe you’d feel more comfortable over at Stormfront?​
I think stormfront got banned.
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2021
Messages
582
Apparently we all want to be black.


The Top 6 Things Black Women Have That Other Women Want
In the world of co-opting, appropriation, Iggy Azaleas and Kardashians, it seems as though, in the words of the great Paul Mooney, everyone wants to be a black woman until it’s time to actually “be a black woman.” I get it.​
Black women are the s—t. And we have been since the beginning of time. Black women have fought hard to be accepted in society, past and present. Black women are trendsetters and revolutionaries. So I understand why other women try their hardest to emulate us. But when it comes to imitating and appropriating, they all fail. There’s this thing called “authenticity.” You either have it or you don’t. And some women try really hard to “have it.”​
Here are the top 6 things black women have that other women want:​
1. Lips​
Back in the day, big lips were made fun of, but nowadays women are going to extremes to have their lips inflated for a fuller, more succulent look. It all started with collagen injections, but now there’s a simpler way to give your mouth that extra boost.​
With products like CandyLipz, all you have to do is take a plastic suction-cup device and put your lips in it while it squeezes the life out of them. And voilà—you’re walking around looking as if you got stung by a billion bees and lived to tell the tale. But you may not want to leave the house for a few days, because the warning that comes along with the device is that it can cause bruising and redness.​
2. Darker Skin​
I truly feel sorry for the women who spend countless hours tanning in the sun and at tanning salons. You have to wonder if they realize that in 20 years they’ll end up looking more like a California raisin than a tanner version of their former selves.​
Those of us who were blessed with melanin and brown skin scoff at those walking around looking like “Tan Mom.” Then you have those women who realize that tanning isn’t great for their skin and resort to spray-on tans—only to end up being mistaken for Oompa Loompa Boehner.​
3. Ass, Ass, Ass​
Now, this is a tricky subject. Because we all know there are plenty of black women who have resorted to this ass trickery (I see you, Nicki Minaj). Women all over the world are spending fortunes and risking their lives to get fatter asses. And half of the time they don’t even look real. You have women with these tiny-ass waists and Hottentot Venus asses.​
Whether they’re getting ass implants in some seedy hotel room or spending thousands of dollars and heading to the Dominican Republic, everyone from the Kardashians to Iggy Azalea is inflating her rear end. All along, while growing up, some black women had to endure taunting and ridicule for their grandiose derrieres.​
And it’s worth repeating that inflated asses don’t even look real.​
4. Braids, Dreads and Afros​
When Zendaya Coleman wore dreads, some said her hair looked as if it smelled like weed and patchouli. When a certain sister-in-law of Kanye West wore dreads, they called it “trendy.” When nonblack women co-opt hairstyles traditionally worn by black women, they’re always called fashionable. Remember last year during Fashion Week and the baby-hair debacle? How long have black women and young black girls been sporting baby hair? Black women in cornrows equals ghetto. Nonblack women in cornrows equals trendsetters.​
Next thing you know, nonblack women will be out there rocking kinky, curly Afros. Wait, there’s already a tutorial on how they can get “Afro” hair.​
5. Black Men​
Once you go black, you’re now a Kardashian. Back in the day, nonblack women would have to sneak around just to get their “jungle fever” on. Nowadays, there’s no more sneaking around. Whether they’re truly into black men or just want to see if the “myths” are true, nonblack women are snatching up black men left and right. I just have one request: Stay away from Idris Elba. He’s mine.​
As someone who has dated all types of ethnicities for the majority of her dating life, I truly don’t see anything wrong with it. But miss me with giving interracial dating corny names like “swirling.” Also miss me with putting down your own race to justify why you’re dating another. And that goes for everyone.​
6. Survival Skills​
You can knock us down, but we’ll get back up. We have Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks. These women have paved the way for today’s black woman. They laid the groundwork. What some people refer to as “leaning in,” we call living.​
I can already see the comments section, so I’ll save you some time. OMG, you’re racist: No, I’m not; I have white friends. Well, black women straighten their hair and wear weaves. I guess they’re trying to be white, too: You’d think by now someone would come up with a more original retort. I hate this site. It’s always talking about race: Well, maybe you’d feel more comfortable over at Stormfront?​
I dont like 75% of those things. I must be a white supremist!!!
 

redqueen

Superstar
Joined
May 15, 2017
Messages
6,270
This day and age where ya can
be TG or TA =trans animal
As schools are allowing students to identify
as cats,dogs and furries (which I thought was more adultish but meh what do I know)
To the point of putting litter boxes into classrooms
and allowing them to meow or bark w/e to answer questions
If people can accept that then they should be able to accept TR
And your right Red Sky At Morning
What's tanning but trying to be a skin colour your not
and omg remember tanning mom(Patricia Krentcil)
pale women been tanning forever now that's been accepted as norm
just as long so why not TR

Guess that's what the pedos say too eh
Welllll ya accepted all this other stuff
how came we cannot be accepted

There are a lot of above mentioned things that
should never have been acceptable in the first place
as all of it was part of tptbs agendas to create more labels
with which to confuse and divide
 

Attachments

Sibi

Star
Joined
Aug 11, 2021
Messages
1,563
I thought people tanned so they looked like they hung out at the beach or were on a tropical vacation. It used to be white people stayed inside and the darker skinned people worked outside. I have never heard anyone say they wanted to be a dark skinned person.

It's a fashion that shows you had enough money you could afford that vacation or even the tanning services. Another trend is to put on fake nails. These are clearly impractical but they show that you do not do hard labor (high class).

Sunshine, the beach, tanning without the sun.


It also shows muscle tone better.


Nails
 

redqueen

Superstar
Joined
May 15, 2017
Messages
6,270
Might've started that way Sibi
but like a lot of the old days it's not
for that now as ya can see by looking around
there are a ton I mean a ton tanning now for the
sole purpose of trying to be as black as they can get

And the first set of guys are not the same pic
As ones a lot more dad shaped then the tanned version
So guess it helps to get in shape before ya tan
As ya can see by the other pic of the guy not in shape
all it looks like is he's been outside mowing the lawn for a few hrs
the nails are same thing at one point it meant money/prestige
now it's all just to look hot eh I cannot stand when I see kids getting
their nails done like that do not get me wrong press on nails
that are actual nail size for a child then ok but adult looking
nails on a lil girl nope not mine
and we'll a lot of women don't do much of anything now a days
either most these girls just want a guy that has the money
to keep them did up that's about as much as they do
go shopping,getting done up
spending the cash of a guy half the time
they don't even give a darn about

This is not when we were growing up
but even then it bothered me as I have
brown skin and never understood why anyone would
want it since I got teased about it always
now that I'm disabled and do not get out much
cause of agoraphobia(cause my past) I'm not as brown as
I once was and I find no one really even says a thing now about my skin

This world has changed and everything has changed
with it
What once was done to show money,power and prestige
is now done by everyone just to be darker skinned
It's nothing to do with the beach or vacations much anymore
 
Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Messages
2,864
Might've started that way Sibi
but like a lot of the old days it's not
for that now as ya can see by looking around
there are a ton I mean a ton tanning now for the
sole purpose of trying to be as black as they can get

And the first set of guys are not the same pic
As ones a lot more dad shaped then the tanned version
So guess it helps to get in shape before ya tan
As ya can see by the other pic of the guy not in shape
all it looks like is he's been outside mowing the lawn for a few hrs
the nails are same thing at one point it meant money/prestige
now it's all just to look hot eh I cannot stand when I see kids getting
their nails done like that do not get me wrong press on nails
that are actual nail size for a child then ok but adult looking
nails on a lil girl nope not mine
and we'll a lot of women don't do much of anything now a days
either most these girls just want a guy that has the money
to keep them did up that's about as much as they do
go shopping,getting done up
spending the cash of a guy half the time
they don't even give a darn about

This is not when we were growing up
but even then it bothered me as I have
brown skin and never understood why anyone would
want it since I got teased about it always
now that I'm disabled and do not get out much
cause of agoraphobia(cause my past) I'm not as brown as
I once was and I find no one really even says a thing now about my skin

This world has changed and everything has changed
with it
What once was done to show money,power and prestige
is now done by everyone just to be darker skinned
It's nothing to do with the beach or vacations much anymore
Have you ever thought about doing a thread about agoraphobia as I find that an interesting topic Although I don't know if it has already been done. Concerning this about tanning I grew up in a beach town and surfers were always tan because they out in the sun so much so some people would try and get tan because surfers were kind of admired as being cool.
 

Red Sky at Morning

Superstar
Joined
Mar 15, 2017
Messages
14,458
@Lizard King

Just catching up, some interesting points about tanning etc… I have also met Filipino people who are taken up with having whiter skin, with a whole industry in skin bleaching. For some reason, people find it hard to accept what they are and expend a lot of energy trying to be something else!!!

I don’t think this is inherently wrong, but it can certainly become dysfunctional. The media is full of people who have numerous surgeries to look more like a pop star they admire, have tattoos and implants to make themselves look like lizards or go as far as possible to try to look like they are a from a culture they don’t come from. The reasons why are often the interesting part.

For me, with blackness (looking back) I think it was going to a high school where skinheads were still a thing. These pasty, spotty, rude, uneducated racists made me feel disgust for in-your-face whiteness and the simultaneous positive role models of appealing black stars made me, for a time, feel a sense of “not belonging” to the ethnic group I found myself in.

In a similar way, there are many guys who become “camp” in response to examples of masculinity that repel them, either in their family or wider culture. With appealing gender fluid icons to look to and a generation of moronic fathers who grew up reading Loaded and Maxim magazines, it is quite understandable how a generation of gender confused men can be created.

What I was trying to get at with this thread was I genuinely have no phobia of trans people as there are deep reasons why they may come to feel the way they do. I would even use their preferred pronoun (to their face) if it made them feel better and if identifying them by their biological gender caused them anguish. At the same time, widening the lens out to other forms of dysphoria, I genuinely do not believe you can “become” what you are not simply by changing a few external things and “passing” as the opposite gender. If that view gets me cancelled, so be it!!!!
 
Last edited:

Sibi

Star
Joined
Aug 11, 2021
Messages
1,563
Being trans is a perversion.
A man who wants to be called a woman has autogynephilia. He is turned on by the thought he is a woman. Notice that usually they do not pick regular names like Sara or Michelle and are not modest/demure. They usually like to dress slutty and disgusting. The thought of being abused as a woman turns them on. The thought of having periods turns them on (J Yaniv). Look up this word autogynephilia and you will see they are trying really hard to convince us all that it is *normal* but it is a perversion. I do not want any part of this sickness. Forcing someone to call you by a gender that is not true is forcing them to lie. It is like in 1984. The mathematical sentence 2 + 2 = 5 is a motif linked to the theme of psychological independence. Early in the novel, Orwell writes that “Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four.”

"
 

Red Sky at Morning

Superstar
Joined
Mar 15, 2017
Messages
14,458
Being trans is a perversion.
A man who wants to be called a woman has autogynephilia. He is turned on by the thought he is a woman. Notice that usually they do not pick regular names like Sara or Michelle and are not modest/demure. They usually like to dress slutty and disgusting. The thought of being abused as a woman turns them on. The thought of having periods turns them on (J Yaniv). Look up this word autogynephilia and you will see they are trying really hard to convince us all that it is *normal* but it is a perversion. I do not want any part of this sickness. Forcing someone to call you by a gender that is not true is forcing them to lie. It is like in 1984. The mathematical sentence 2 + 2 = 5 is a motif linked to the theme of psychological independence. Early in the novel, Orwell writes that “Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four.”

"
I think the “trans community” is very broad. There are definitely some weirdos in there and at the other end of the spectrum are some people who have been through harrowing experiences and find their own gender an intolerable state. I once spoke with a person born intersex who was “assigned” male, but felt female her whole life. The challenge is to show the people who need it the compassion they deserve, while protecting society from the predatory “trans” imposters who are taking advantage of the current political climate.
 
Joined
Aug 12, 2020
Messages
830
Apparently we all want to be black.


The Top 6 Things Black Women Have That Other Women Want
In the world of co-opting, appropriation, Iggy Azaleas and Kardashians, it seems as though, in the words of the great Paul Mooney, everyone wants to be a black woman until it’s time to actually “be a black woman.” I get it.​
Black women are the s—t. And we have been since the beginning of time. Black women have fought hard to be accepted in society, past and present. Black women are trendsetters and revolutionaries. So I understand why other women try their hardest to emulate us. But when it comes to imitating and appropriating, they all fail. There’s this thing called “authenticity.” You either have it or you don’t. And some women try really hard to “have it.”​
Here are the top 6 things black women have that other women want:​
1. Lips​
Back in the day, big lips were made fun of, but nowadays women are going to extremes to have their lips inflated for a fuller, more succulent look. It all started with collagen injections, but now there’s a simpler way to give your mouth that extra boost.​
With products like CandyLipz, all you have to do is take a plastic suction-cup device and put your lips in it while it squeezes the life out of them. And voilà—you’re walking around looking as if you got stung by a billion bees and lived to tell the tale. But you may not want to leave the house for a few days, because the warning that comes along with the device is that it can cause bruising and redness.​
2. Darker Skin​
I truly feel sorry for the women who spend countless hours tanning in the sun and at tanning salons. You have to wonder if they realize that in 20 years they’ll end up looking more like a California raisin than a tanner version of their former selves.​
Those of us who were blessed with melanin and brown skin scoff at those walking around looking like “Tan Mom.” Then you have those women who realize that tanning isn’t great for their skin and resort to spray-on tans—only to end up being mistaken for Oompa Loompa Boehner.​
3. Ass, Ass, Ass​
Now, this is a tricky subject. Because we all know there are plenty of black women who have resorted to this ass trickery (I see you, Nicki Minaj). Women all over the world are spending fortunes and risking their lives to get fatter asses. And half of the time they don’t even look real. You have women with these tiny-ass waists and Hottentot Venus asses.​
Whether they’re getting ass implants in some seedy hotel room or spending thousands of dollars and heading to the Dominican Republic, everyone from the Kardashians to Iggy Azalea is inflating her rear end. All along, while growing up, some black women had to endure taunting and ridicule for their grandiose derrieres.​
And it’s worth repeating that inflated asses don’t even look real.​
4. Braids, Dreads and Afros​
When Zendaya Coleman wore dreads, some said her hair looked as if it smelled like weed and patchouli. When a certain sister-in-law of Kanye West wore dreads, they called it “trendy.” When nonblack women co-opt hairstyles traditionally worn by black women, they’re always called fashionable. Remember last year during Fashion Week and the baby-hair debacle? How long have black women and young black girls been sporting baby hair? Black women in cornrows equals ghetto. Nonblack women in cornrows equals trendsetters.​
Next thing you know, nonblack women will be out there rocking kinky, curly Afros. Wait, there’s already a tutorial on how they can get “Afro” hair.​
5. Black Men​
Once you go black, you’re now a Kardashian. Back in the day, nonblack women would have to sneak around just to get their “jungle fever” on. Nowadays, there’s no more sneaking around. Whether they’re truly into black men or just want to see if the “myths” are true, nonblack women are snatching up black men left and right. I just have one request: Stay away from Idris Elba. He’s mine.​
As someone who has dated all types of ethnicities for the majority of her dating life, I truly don’t see anything wrong with it. But miss me with giving interracial dating corny names like “swirling.” Also miss me with putting down your own race to justify why you’re dating another. And that goes for everyone.​
6. Survival Skills​
You can knock us down, but we’ll get back up. We have Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks. These women have paved the way for today’s black woman. They laid the groundwork. What some people refer to as “leaning in,” we call living.​
I can already see the comments section, so I’ll save you some time. OMG, you’re racist: No, I’m not; I have white friends. Well, black women straighten their hair and wear weaves. I guess they’re trying to be white, too: You’d think by now someone would come up with a more original retort. I hate this site. It’s always talking about race: Well, maybe you’d feel more comfortable over at Stormfront?​
Okay to clear up this mystery I will have to be politically incorrect. There are people born with mongoloid and negroid features. Hence the term Negro. I really don't think anyone is envious of their features especially white women. Unfortunately this is proven by sex trafficking and prostitution where white women have always been more expensive. And seriously is there anyone who wants to be called a Negro?
 
Joined
Mar 17, 2017
Messages
2,342
What if kids were told there were a number of races out there and some kids just don’t feel comfortable with the race “assigned to them at birth?”. When filling an a government form on ethnic background, why can’t I tick the box of the race I identify with??
You mean like some group did when they paid $5 to become “Indians” in America?

Or how about the 1828 definition of “American”:

native of America; originally applied to the aboriginals, or copper-colored races, found here by the Europeans; but now applied to the descendants of Europeans born in America.

Originally applied to someone else, then Euros came and applied it to themselves? Who is really the first “transracial”?

And on a side note:

but I eventually made peace with my Anglo-Saxon genetics.
You mean your barbarian genetics?


“The Saxons were among the "barbarian" nations that would engage against Rome during late antiquity, putting an end to the dying imperial order in the western realm of Rome, reshaping the map, and renaming the nations of Europe.”
 

Red Sky at Morning

Superstar
Joined
Mar 15, 2017
Messages
14,458
You mean like some group did when they paid $5 to become “Indians” in America?

Or how about the 1828 definition of “American”:

native of America; originally applied to the aboriginals, or copper-colored races, found here by the Europeans; but now applied to the descendants of Europeans born in America.

Originally applied to someone else, then Euros came and applied it to themselves? Who is really the first “transracial”?

And on a side note:



You mean your barbarian genetics?


“The Saxons were among the "barbarian" nations that would engage against Rome during late antiquity, putting an end to the dying imperial order in the western realm of Rome, reshaping the map, and renaming the nations of Europe.”
I have come to believe that “race” is the least defining and important part about me @KoncreteMind
 
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