African-American Appreciation Thread - Not Actually an Appreciation Thread

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
No-one taught me how to deal with the police, I just instinctively knew that it's probably better to do what they say due to my not being a retarded belligerent nigger, i.e. my White privilege.
That's another thing. You'd think that more of these people who are supposedly afraid and fear for their lives everytime the feds cruise by would keep their head down and keep interaction to a minimum. As it turns out, the only thing going through their heads is not being 'disrespected' by the officer. It should click in their heads not to antagonize a guy with a pistol. But no.

Now the bodycams are racist
 
No-one taught me how to deal with the police, I just instinctively knew that it's probably better to do what they say due to my not being a retarded belligerent nigger, i.e. my White privilege.
For the most part, yes, and you could be charged with obstruction for failing to comply with lawful orders. However, once you've been advised of your legal right to remain silent when being questioned, it is absolutely for the best that you invoke it. There's a saying: "if you're guilty, you need a lawyer, and if you're innocent, you REALLY need a lawyer".
 
black people 100% lie about teaching their kids to be afraid of cops. So many interactions with black people and cops are just cops explaining what was happening and why they get pulled over, and then blacks just chimping out over it, drawing a weapon, taking off from the scene. There is almost never an interaction where the cop has purposefully instigated these interactions. They struggle with the "can I see your license and registration" stage. The lack of "respect" that cops apparently show black people is born of nigger entitlement, and it's fucking obvious by how often so-called innocent, hardworking, 'educated' blacks get into these interactions.

I was taught by my parents what to do when confronted by cops. You keep things very blunt, brief, and most importantly civil. Do not get snarky with a cop. You tell them where all the weapons are if they ask. You just keep relaxed and wait for the stop to be done. This is how I knew. Most of these people clearly did not get the proper life advice to explain what to do if they got stopped. They escalate a penalty, fine, or misdemeanor into a felony or another harsh charge because of their own. It's not all blacks and plenty of whites fall into this category, but the narrative for black people is always about the justice system being naturally against them.

I've seen it go both ways. I put them in two groups.

group A usually sounds like: "the police are evil and should all die, especially the white ones. More important we as parents, want you home safe so you can't just jump out of the driver seat punch them and go for their duty pistol. We'll deal with that later.

Group B: "fuck dem crackers they never done nothin' good for nobodies, specially the pohleez. On yo Granny I swear to God they pull dat "plase exit the car sir" shit, on me I'ma kill all of them them about to get me out da car. Hey, where da fuck my EBT card at? You seen where I put that fucker"? We need groceries"


I was taught more or less the same thing. I love my dad, he taught me some very interesting things at an early age. Things like like ballistics forensics, ie how police had a much harder time tying 12 gauge buckshot to weapon than a copper jacketed slug like 9mm JHP. He was never a "wise guy" or associate but he grew up with a lot of WOPs and shit "fell off trucks" all the time. My mom used to yell at him for letting me watch "Goodfellas" when I was 11 or something. He told me whatever the fuck happens you get pulled over on the side the road you don't make shit worse. "You can beat the rap, but you can't beat the ride", the same thing the police say. You don't ask them for a beating, extra charges or worse.

I can only speak from personal anecdotal experience I probably should have gotten a way worse speeding ticket than I actually did a couple of times. I think I was doing 115 in the middle of the desert from Vegas on a Wednesday night. I figured nobody out here, nobody in danger but myself, let's have some fun, Then I pass by a cruiser I can just see silhouette of hidden in the dark in the center between roads, the fucking ford SUV highway patrol loves, I know I'm fucked so I slow it down and cross fingers. 1/2 mile later here come the lights, I explain my reasoning if I wrecked I'd be hurting nobody but myself and just blatantly said I didn't think anyone was out here patrolling. When I saw the Ford SUV and I figured it was two people too cheap to get a hotel room fucking or two officers. I get a laugh of him and ticket, ticket says IDK 85 in a 65 or something, not 115 which is actually arrestable offense and immediate DL revocation as I recall.

People back talk cops and lie to them all week long (mostley niggers) . IMHO you don't don't pointlesslessly lie to them about things the radar gun and their own eyes have seen 1000 times previosly. If you can try to get a laugh out of them like your selling them a used car or something. More importantly don't act like a nigger. You act like a nigger that ticket is going to say 115, the car is going to get searched and towed.
 
I 100% believe that fancy rims, jewelry, and especially shoe collecting are psych operations by major corporations to part foolish blacks from their spending money.
People often complain about how modern advertisements predominantly depict blacks or mixed race couples, as a psyop for miscegenation. But really, I think the economic driving force behind the blackening of advertisements is the advertisers' attempt to capitalize on the low impulse control of blacks. Target them more heavily to sell whatever mass-produced sweatshop goods and slop, knowing that they will plow all their disposable income into buying junk, instead of paying off car loan or mortgage or saving or investing.
 
That poor little girl already has a receding hairline because Mom has insisted on yanking her hair back for braids since almost day one. Why are they like this?! Whyyyyy???!!!!!

I'm so sick of articles like this that not only frame everything as "poor dindus!" but also the lowercasing of whites while capitalizing blacks. The fact the AP has rolled this shit out is so fucking retarded.
The AP Stylebook is pure woke clown world faggotry. You don't hate them enough.

Fatigue moment at the grocery store this afternoon: young, black woman with a normal BMI is riding around on one of those scooters that the store provides. An employee stops her and says that those are for elderly or physically disabled customers only. She says, "Okaaaaayyyyy" in that snotty, dismissive negress tone and drives away from him. She gets about halfway down the aisle, steps off, walks back toward me at the beginning of the aisle with absolutely no issue, looks at the shelf for a bit before grabbing something, hops back on, and drives off while staring at her smartphone. In a better world, I would be able to yank her off of that thing and admonish her relentlessly without suffering any consequences. I think I am going to start driving to the store across town where the socioeconomic factors don't live.
 
Last edited:
Fatigue moment at the grocery store this afternoon: young, black woman with a normal BMI is riding around on one of those scooters that the store provides. An employee stops her and says that those are for elderly or physically disabled customers only. She says, "Okaaaaayyyyy" in that snotty, dismissive negress tone and drives away from him. She gets about halfway down the aisle, steps off, walks back toward me at the beginning of the aisle with absolutely no issue, looks at the shelf for a bit before grabbing something, hops back on, and drives off while staring at her smartphone. In a better world, I would be able to yank her off of that thing and admonish her relentlessly without suffering any consequences. I think I am going to start driving to the store across town where the socioeconomic factors don't live.
Sounds familiar.
However, once you've been advised of your legal right to remain silent when being questioned, it is absolutely for the best that you invoke it.
Just FYI for everyone, you actually have to say, "I'm going to use my right to remain silent" or something similar.
People often complain about how modern advertisements predominantly depict blacks or mixed race couples, as a psyop for miscegenation.
1766896716728.png 1766896769494.png 1766896848592.png
 
I realized that black people 100% lie about teaching their kids to be afraid of cops.
It's not that they're lying about teaching their kids about the cops. It's more they're teaching them how to get away if possible and what to say and do if they get caught. They're also teaching them that cops are not their friends (which, TBH, is true for everyone) and that they're all racist (not true, though some are, and it's getting worse as fatigue grows).

They're definitely encouraging that lack of respect for authority. And bear in mind it's usually only mothers teaching nogs -- the fathers are rarely in the picture. That twists the picture even further.

Just FYI for everyone, you actually have to say, "I'm going to use my right to remain silent" or something similar.
I believe the currently-recommended statement goes like this: "I'm invoking my right to remain silent, I'm not answering any of your questions, I'm ending this interview and I want to speak with an attorney." Throw in a "I don't consent to any searches, but I won't try to stop you" for good measure. That last bit is especially good to say if ordered out of your car. They'll manufacture probable cause either way, but at least it'll be on body camera (and in your memory) that you explicitly invoked the Fourth Amendment too, and the final bit ensures they can't try to interpret refused consent as a "challenge" or "warning" that you'll use force to prevent it.

It's fucking ridiculous it's come to this, but you can thank the SCOTUS faggots for letting cops wriggle out of more procedural fuckups to score more convictions. The especially egregious ruling was the one concerning a guy who invoked his right to remain silent and demand an attorney, then brought back to interrogation later (sans attorney) and didn't reassert his right to remain silent when they asked him more questions anyway. The fucktards of the high court decided that he his prior invocation was "revoked" by the fact that he kept talking, even though the expectation was they shouldn't have asked him any more questions once he invoked and demanded an attorney to begin with.

That's why you have to say "I'm not answering any of your questions, I'm ending this interview" among the other shit in that first sentence -- they're allowed to continue peppering you with questions even if you invoke your Fifth Amendment rights and even if you demand an attorney. Repeat the whole thing until they get the hint and stop. The harder they badger you, the happier your defense attorney will be.

Also, sign nothing without reading it thoroughly, roadside or not. Make a mental note if that infuriates a cop enough that they take the form away before you can read it and just mark it with an "X" for you or annotate that you refused to sign it (because in some cases the faggots can charge you with that too, like if it's a "promise to appear" traffic ticket in some jurisdictions). Without your signature on whatever bullshit they later charge you for, your attorney can assert you were never given the form or allowed to read it.
 
Here's the article @Retreaded Tire posted, but in text. It also includes the list of black client's names the author posted after in the sidebar. They're interesting, to say the least.

Urban Law 101

By Donald Williamson
Published
: 9/11/2009 (original publication date September, 2003)

[Editor’s Note: This is just one of thirteen essays in our newly-released collection of first-hand reports about the reality of race, Face to Face with Race.]

I grew up in a suburb of a large northern city, and had no real contact with blacks until I became a lawyer. After I got my law degree I naïvely looked forward to a rewarding legal career. Little did I realize that 25 years later I would be a self-employed attorney doing domestic and civil litigation for a clientele that is overwhelmingly black.

I didn’t plan it that way. I just wanted to do a lot of work in the courtroom, and the best offer I got out of law school was with a small firm that specialized in bankruptcy. Most of its clients were black. Several years later, I set up an independent practice and many of my former clients came to me for domestic work.

Most people do not realize this, but outside the world of corporate or securities law, in any big city the legal profession is to a large degree fueled by the pathologies of blacks and other Third-World people. Of course, whites hire lawyers, but in any city, especially one with a good-sized black population, most of the people who need lawyers are black. In this respect, lawyers are like police officers or social workers — they rarely deal with ordinary white people.

To a large degree, I became racially conscious because of my black clients, who eventually destroyed all my preconceived notions about race. My awakening did not come from one or even a few incidents, but from the accumulation of thousands upon thousands of small interactions.

Day after day my clients continue to amaze me. There is no racial education quite so thorough and convincing as spending time with blacks, and my clients are far from being the poorest and least competent blacks. They are not indigent criminals for whom I am a court-appointed lawyer. They are people who can afford (or think they can afford) a lawyer to get a divorce, contest a custody judgment, beat a traffic ticket, etc. Some are government employees who make $60 to $70 thousand a year, yet even this group is vastly different from whites.

They Don’t Know

One of the most striking things about my black clients is the things they do not know. Many blacks, for example, do not know their own telephone numbers. They may think they do but they don’t, and the problem has gotten worse with the proliferation of cell phones. At least a third of the numbers they leave with my receptionist or on my answering machine are wrong numbers. Often, a potential client will call several times, each time leaving a variation of the same phone number. I keep calling until they get it right. At first I thought I was taking down the numbers incorrectly, but now I know better. With caller ID, it is clear when what the client says does not match the digital display.

Some callers don’t even leave a number. About a quarter of the messages blacks leave do not include either a name or a number. Needless to say, many calls are not returned.

More than a handful of blacks who have come to my office do not even know their own home address (they move often). Many cannot tell me their own spouse’s names. Now I know to tell clients ahead of time that they will need this sort of information when they come in. Otherwise, if I ask for someone’s address he may look hurt and say, “If I’d known you were going to ask me that I would have come prepared.”

Many black men know their children’s names but do not know how to spell them. With the proliferation of unusual names among blacks, I can only guess at how they are spelled. One client who told me he couldn’t spell his children’s names said I would need an encyclopedia to look them up. Many men have admitted to me they are not even sure how to pronounce their children’s names. Black woman, on the other hand, often become incensed if you mispronounce the very unusual names they have given their children.

The most unusual name I ever came across was Iisszzttadda. I have never met a person, white or black, who could pronounce it correctly. To my surprise the name is pronounced, “I seize the day.” Iisszzttadda had siblings named Raheem, Utopian, Desiorme, Sid-Timothy, Kizzma, and Larilaril. I have occasionally asked clients the reasons for such unusual names, but the most common answer is “I don’t know. It just sounded good.” This is the answer I got from a mother who named her child Latrine. (See below for actual names of blacks I have encountered in my practice.)

I once had a client in my office who did not know his own name. He had been called by his nickname for so long he couldn’t remember his given name. This is not as shocking as it sounds. Some black names, like Phe-anjoy or Quithreaun or JyesahJhnai, are so odd, it would be no surprise if they were never used and eventually forgotten.

Names are not the only things blacks do not know. Once when I was filling out a form for a female client I asked if she knew how old her husband was. She told me she didn’t know. I asked her the next question on the form, which was her husband’s birth date. Amazingly, she knew it — and was genuinely surprised when I told her she could figure out her husband’s age from his birth date.

When potential clients call for the first time, often the hardest part is to figure out why they are calling. Usually they begin in the middle of the story. If you let them, they will go on and on, and say nothing. Clients may call about papers they got in the mail, but never have the papers in front of them. They may call for information, but never have a pen or pencil ready to take it down. I have learned to ask direct questions: “What is your name?” “What is the problem?” If a client cannot tell me in three minutes or less what the problem is, I tell him to come to my office and bring a small retainer fee. That way at least I will have to listen to their ramblings only if they are prepared to pay.

Blacks with whom I have already spoken seem to think I should know instantly who they are when they telephone. After I get on the line, a typical conversation may go like this:

“Who am I speaking to?”

“I am your client.”

“I have many clients, can you tell me which one?”

“I am your divorce client.”

“Can you tell me your name?”

“Rufus.”

“Rufus, can you tell me your last name?”

The conversation may go on for some time before I finally figure out who is calling.

I do not take personal injury or product liability cases, but blacks are always asking about bringing suits of this kind: “My vacuum cleaner broke. Can you help me?”

Most of my clients who are not black either show up on time for appointments or call if they must reschedule. Amazing as this may seem, only about five percent of my black clients show up on time, and by that I mean within an hour of the appointed time. Only one in five show up on the appointed day. A few trickle in a day or two later. Most just never show up. Missing an appointment never embarrasses black people. They call repeatedly for new appointments, making four, five or even six appointments and then miss them all. I had one client who called more than 50 times before he finally came to my office. Rarely do I ever get a call from a black client canceling an appointment.

When I first started out as a lawyer I would call clients in advance to remind them of their appointments. They thanked me, but it made them no more likely to show up. Also, I used to call clients and potential clients who missed appointments, and try to have them reschedule. This did very little good. The most common response was, “Why are you calling me?” and it was never their fault that they didn’t show up. They had many different excuses, but I never heard, “I forgot,” or “I’m sorry I didn’t make it.”

Since appointments mean so little to my clients, I decide each day when I am available, and tell everyone to show up at the same time. On Saturday afternoons I can have as many as twenty appointments for the same time. Usually it is not a problem because few show up and even fewer show up on time. Only once in the last 20 years did everyone show up.

Many of my clients are unable to explain even the most basic facts. Often they must take the witness stand, and no matter how many times we have gone over the testimony in advance, I can be surprised by what they say. Some are simply lying and get tangled up in their lies, but most have such low IQs, they cannot describe even the simplest things. Often they seem to say the first thing that pops into their heads. When they are questioned further they cannot remember what they said previously.

I once had a client whose wife was suing him for child support. In discussions before trial he told me he had two children from a previous marriage. This was favorable for him because it meant he would probably owe his current wife less money. At trial, his wife testified that my client had no children outside of their marriage. When I asked him on the stand how many children he had before he married his current wife, he said he had none. Later I asked him why he had answered that way, when he told me before that he had two other children. “Did I say that?” he asked. I never found out which version was true.

Many of my clients have a hard time following simple directions. Once I appeared in traffic court with a client. In lieu of a conviction he was to see a traffic safety movie. The courtroom was on the second floor of the courthouse, and the traffic safety movie was shown on the first floor. The client was to come back to the courtroom with proof — which would be given him on the first floor — that he watched the movie. Both the judge and I explained this to the client. At the designated hour my client did not come back to the courtroom. Later that afternoon I got a call from the judge, who told me my client had completely misunderstood the instructions. He went to the nearest commercial movie house, saw a movie, and brought back his movie ticket stub.

Long ago I stopped asking my clients why they did something. It is not worth the effort. Most don’t know. The ones who know usually cannot give a coherent answer. Even if they can give a coherent answer, it usually changes every time you ask.

For example, one of my black divorce clients tried to hide assets from his spouse — this is not uncommon. Through discovery it came to light that he had secretly bought a piece of property after the divorce had begun. He put his wife’s name on the title, a very odd thing to do, since he was trying to hide the property from her. I made the mistake of asking him why he did that. True to my previous experiences, he could not give an answer that made sense.

Clients sometimes tell me they knew they were being cheated, but signed the papers anyway. I have given up asking why they signed, because I know I will not get an intelligible answer.

My clients make mistakes in written and spoken English that are often comical. One client in a criminal case told me he was telling the truth, and was willing to take a “polyester test” to prove it. Another told me he desperately wanted to see me, and needed an appointment “between Tuesday and Wednesday.” One who bounced a check told me the problem was “insignificant funds” in his account. I have had clients who have “profiteering” plans at work, want an “uncontestable” divorce (or a “detested” divorce, or an “untested” divorce), had “insects” (incest) in the family, need an “annoyment” (annulment), want a free “flirtation” (consultation), ask about my “container” (retainer), want to “consultate” about a divorce, or had to meet with “media people” (mediation counselors). One man told me, “I own a car but it is not mine,” and one who was accused of indecent exposure insisted, “I didn’t take my stuff out of my pants.”

It took me some time to understand certain kinds of black slang. Within the first month of my independent practice a man called to ask if I could “put a suitcase on a cat.” After much inquiry I realized he wanted to know if I could file a law suit against someone. Within the week I got another call asking if I “did luggage.” Since I now knew about suitcases, I said yes, I do luggage.

I pride myself on doing good work for my clients, but I cannot remember even once being thanked or complimented by a black client. They do not observe even the most common courtesies. Also, with rare exceptions, blacks will never admit they made a mistake. When things go wrong, as they inevitably do, it is always someone else’s fault. The most common excuse blacks give is, “They are putting me through the changes.” I have yet to figure out exactly what that means.

Most people tell lies because they think a lie will help them. I have come to the conclusion that most of my clients cannot distinguish between a plausible lie and a wild fairy tale. They are convinced people will believe anything they say. Clients often tell me some fantastic story I cannot possibly defend in court. If I tell them what they are saying is unbelievable the usual reaction is anger and screaming. Typically, they will add, “I’m paying you. You have to believe what I say.”

Sometimes, despite my warnings, clients will get on the stand and tell obvious, outright lies. The judge may interrupt the testimony and tell me to go outside with my client to “get your story straight.” They are not going to sit in court and listen to fairy tales. I take my client outside and tell him he has got to tell the truth, or at least say something believable. My client then starts screaming. “Why are you talking to me this way? You’re supposed to be on my side.”

I once had a client testify about his assets in a divorce case, in which the court was to determine whether he should pay his estranged wife temporary support. My client was a store-front preacher, and testified that he lived in the marital residence with his wife, though in separate quarters. His wife testified that he was out living with his “ho.” My client went on and on about how this was impossible because he was a Man of God. I thought he was lying. The judge ruled that if my client was living with his wife he should share household expenses, which he was not currently paying. At this point, my client realized there was a cost to pretending to be a Man of God living with his lawful wife, and changed his tune. “Judge why are you believing me?” he said. “Believe my wife. I am nothing but an old lying nigger.” No one in the courtroom could stop laughing.

Outside Kids

“Outside kid” cases are one of my specialties. For those not in the know, blacks call any child born out of wedlock an outside kid. Black men are good at making children but not at supporting them, and this can be a terrible burden under laws written with white people in mind.

In my state, the parent who does not have custody — almost always the father — pays a percentage of net income to the parent with custody — almost always the mother. The mother gets 20 percent of the father’s net income for the first child, 25 percent for two children, and up to 50 percent for five or more children. What if a man has children by several women? Each mother gets 20 percent for the first child, so a man with five children by five different women is supposed to be paying 100 percent of his income in child support. I once had a client who had 12 different children by 10 different women. Theoretically, he owed 250 percent of his income. These laws simply don’t make sense for blacks. Judges have to decide each case as best they can.

Not surprisingly, the average black client will not pay child support unless it is deducted from his paycheck. Many refuse to work, or leave a job to avoid paying. Job turnover is very high among blacks, and the court system has a hard time keeping up with them. Some blacks quit on purpose, and move to another job so as to keep one step ahead of the collections.

Whenever I ask a potential client whether he has paid court-ordered child support he will almost invariably answer with one or more of the following: “I always helps my kids.” “I gives the mother money whenever she asks.” “I am always there for my kids.” “I buys my kids whatever they needs.” It almost always turns out they have paid no support, haven’t seen their children in years, and at best may have paid for some basketball shoes.

Children do not always seem to have the same importance for blacks that they do for whites. I was in bankruptcy court once waiting for my client’s case to be called. A black debtor — not my client — was before the judge trying to convince him to approve his bankruptcy repayment plan. The judge told him he could not afford both his Cadillac and his children, and had to give up one or the other. The debtor immediately said he could not give up his car, and therefore the judge would have to take his kids. The judge threw up his hands and walked off the bench. On another occasion, the same bankruptcy judge told a black debtor he could not afford both his Cadillac and his house. The debtor replied, “You can live in your car but you can’t drive your house. Take my house.” This was many years ago and tastes in cars may have changed, but I learned how important Cadillacs were to blacks.

In one respect my job is very different from that of a policeman or social worker: I have to make sure I am paid. I try to get paid in full before I agree to represent a client. If I am not paid in full before the case is over I know I will never get any more money. Clients have a hard time understanding they are paying for an attorney’s time. Invariably, if a client drops a case before it is over he asks for a full refund. Their reasoning goes something like this: “I paid for a divorce and I didn’t get one, so I should get all my money back.”

Once I sued a client who didn’t pay me. I finally garnished his wages and was paid in full. About six months later he called to ask me to take his next case. I told him I didn’t want a client that doesn’t pay his bills. He became indignant. He said I got all my money, so what did I have to complain about.

To hear my clients tell it, banks are constantly “messing” with their checking accounts. At least that is what they tell me when their checks bounce. Most of my clients do not have checking accounts, and pay cash. The ones who do have accounts have no idea how much money is in them. Many clients have written me checks on accounts that were closed.

Black clients yell and scream at me every day; I have learned that this is normal. They are like young children who don’t get their way. I usually ignore these outbursts, though screaming back at them is usually more effective. I have been threatened with physical violence only twice, and once I had to call the police to escort a client out of my office.

My experience is hardly unique. Most of the lawyers I know have practices similar to mine. Most lawyers therefore are racial realists even if they do not admit it openly. Their actions and comments are no different from mine. People who have daily contact with minorities, who know first-hand that there are racial differences, are likely to be the best prospects for any movement that promotes racial consciousness. They don’t like dealing with blacks, but that is simply part of the business. If they can’t take it anymore they get into some other line of work.

One lawyer I know moved to the country so he would have white clients. He had lived in the big city all his life, but was willing to pull up all his roots to get a different clientele.

Recently the supreme court in my state ruled that a lawyer can be disciplined for communications that racially denigrate litigants. For that reason I cannot write this article under my own name, much as I would like to. I must hide behind a pseudonym for fear of falling victim to our politically-correct supreme court.

Some Names of Blacks Encountered in My Practice

Aaja (pronounced Asia), Acacia, Ajeenah, Akai, Aquanita, Aryan White, Baleria, Barbertha, Callie (pronounced Kelly), CaAndi, Chetiqua, Cloteal, Curly Top, Darhies, Dayphine, Debrasharme, Derecio, Dertiteriesa, Dikueria & Dikuria (twins), Dildree, Dishon, Dovanna, Duanita, Dyiamond, Dwendolyn, Effillyne, Elizabeth Taylor, Endrissa, Equandolyn, Esaw, Everage, Floyce, Franshawn, Ghia, Godzilla Pimp, Ivier, Jartavious, JyesahJhnai, Keithen, Kentnilla, Lafondra, La,poo (yes, contains comma), Latronia, Lemonjello & Orangejello (twins), L’Tonya, Machoda, Nau-Quia, Mayima, Minute, Miquel, Nethel, Omnipotence, Ondra (pronounced André), Ozro, Padraic, Pecola, Phe-anjoy, Precious Unique, Queen Esther, Quithreaun, Rincesetta, Sanja, Saranus, Shanieja, Sharicus, Shiquipa, SiJourna’i, Silquia, Sinetra, Summer Love, Termicka, Tequilla, Timphanie, Tryphenia, Tywana, Tzaddi & Tzavvi (twins), Ulheric, Undlia, Undrea (pronounced André), Wsam, Xiomara, XL, Yaw, Yuvodka Sharice, Wilida, Zaquan, Zufan, Zyneene.
I've read a few of these on AmRen (amazing site, Uncle Jared is a national treasure) and honestly believed many were fake and embellished. This article did force me to remember that my black friend in a small town I grew up in surprised me by not knowing his middle name, I think it was. The name's "Lemonjello & Orangejello (twins)" were an urban legend, I thought? The amount of red squigglies in the paragraph above is hurting my eyes.

The other name on there, Godzilla Pimp, seemed fake to me, too. I was thinking it was a white person who mistook the term "Gorilla Pimp" and made it up for a name. But, uh, Google says not only is this a real name, but both terms are there:

Godzilla Arrested​

By Tom Knighton / April 23, 2011

1766941862995.png

No wonder Godzilla Gorilla Pimp Hunter – who at least has a Princess — simply goes by “Gee”.

That’s what Albany police said after their encounter with Hunter last week following a domestic dispute.

Hunter – as far as police know, that’s his full, given name – was arrested after his children’s mother told police he struck her in the mouth, splitting her lip.

The alleged victim has quite a name herself – Itachekal Princess Sapp.

“Ms. Sapp stated that Hunter accused her of cheating. They argued for several minutes. Eventually, he became angry and struck her in the lip with a closed hand,” Albany police Ptl. Shelton Brown-Smith said in a report.

Hunter, 22, was charged with simply battery-domestic violence. He was released on $1,000 bond. Sapp, 23, refused to provide a written statement to officers, Smith said.

The young parents-of-two have more in common than unique names and their children: they attended Monroe High School; live together in an apartment on Swift Street in East Albany; and both work for Flash Foods, police said.
Well, I'll be dammed. The article was posted 8 years before this arrest, too, so I bet it was his parents who the lawyer had as a client. It seems like the lawyer would be at risk posting such unique names since he's writing anonymously for fear of being charged, but maybe he's protected since they'll see 34687 lawyers in their day.

Anyway, more Google insanity:
1766937158964.png
 
Last edited:
We could thanks these girls for vindicating Scott Adams.

Btw, I saw this map of metro Milwaukee showing the race and ethnicity of the area and I wonder if the Hispanic area south of the East-West freeway aka I-94 is as rough at the black run area north of the freeway?
I lived there for a number of years before 2020 hit and it was time to get the hell out. It is one of the most segregated cities in the country. I remember a number of my very liberal, very Caucasian friends highlighting this fact, seemingly upset about it, yet none of them seemed to be chomping at the bit to move to the north or south side to start fixing the problem. Funny how that works.

To answer your question: The south side is not great, but not nearly as bad as the north, although I assume it got worse post 2020.
 
Back
Top Bottom