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Sunday, 12 May 2013

Some more people bring me close to breaking my "Not-killed-anyone" record....

The way society acts sometimes makes me want to weep for the future of humanities existence, that is, if weeping weren't such a girly thing to do and I'm so manly, the only time I get close to weeping is when my nuts get squashed by a passing tractor, which happens more than you would think, (because of their large size, ask your girlfriend to describe them, or NASA, since they're one of the many things able to be seen from space)

Some people are complete wankers when it comes to interaction on the interwebz. They believe it a shield of some sort, completely impenetrable, and in some cases, this can be true, hidden identities or with held names, but lately there's been a flood of memes and parodies pretty much making fun of black people and what they say in a particular interview.

A classic (it's the wrong word to use, since classic brings to my mind something good and something that people will want to listen to over and over again, unlike these less than stellar concoctions) was Antoine Dodson:


Hide yo kids, hide yo wife.... Because of this, a new age dawned of making fun of events where people have been interviewed, more typically, black people.

Now, don't get me wrong, Antoine Dodson saved his younger sister from an intruder in her bed, but he began a horrible trend of 'hilarious black people' like Sweet Brown:


The woman was escaping from her burning apartment. Yes, some of what she says and the way she says it is funny, but for fucks sake, the viral rap song about her "hilarious" interview has overshadowed the fact that she barely escaped with her life?!

And the latest "sensation"? Charles Harris. A man who helped rescue three woman who had been held captive for a decade. His video has become so viral, that in many cases people don't even know the heroic actions this man has undertaken:

 
The sad thing is how his so called comical performance is starting to overshadow his heroic act.

The one common and sad factor in this is the trend that these troubled individuals seem to be representatives of the working class people of America and that there seems to be an underlying tone that people just want to see these black under class people perform.

People make me sick sometimes....

MK

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