Whoopi Brings Elisabeth to Tears Feuding Over the "N" Word


Did you guys catch the day time talk show 'The View' yesterday? 

The beginning of the show got intense really fast as another heated conversation on race took center stage! 

Since Senator Obama began running for the presidency, America has had more conversations on the black race than ever before. It's so much black talk going on in the media you'd think it was black history month, and even then you don't hear about black history as much.

Moderator and actress Whoopi Goldberg, opened the show reporting that Fox News declared there was more to Reverend Jesse Jackson's devastating comments about Barack Obama. Fox News stated they had nothing to do with new information surfacing on Jesse Jackson using the "N" word in his behind-the-scenes conversation. 

I've watched the footage Jesse Jackson's comment more than a few times, and I still haven't heard him use the "N" word. If this is a ploy from Fox News to further tarnish the reverends reputation, there's no need because he's doing it all on his own.

The View co-host's Whoopi and Sherry stated that they both use the "N" word, and feel that white people can not and should not use it. 

Their co-host Elisabeth then asked, "How do we get rid of the word, if pop culture and people continuously use it?" Elisabeth went on to say, "Black and White people are the same and we live in the same world." 

Whoopi abruptly sat up in her chair and the next words out of her mouth made Elisabeth break into tears. Whoopi exclaimed to Elisabeth that she was wrong; Blacks and Whites are not the same and we do not live in the same world. Whoopi expressed that black people, "want everything to be balanced and equal, but when you have racist people in this world who praise hate and violence, how will we ever get anywhere?"

Elisabeth needs to research Black history, and then research Nazi history and how they have ties to her good ole Republican pals in the White House

Elisabeth in order to understand Whoopi and Sherry, you have to understand where they came from. It's very important to acknowledge past American events so that we can move on towards the future. Denying ones struggle is like denying ones identity; like the United States still not publicly apologizing or giving reparations to African Americans for over 500 years of slavery.

Interesting though that the United States publicly apologized and gave reparations to the Jews and Japanese people regarding the Holocaust and Vietnam

Why was it so easy for the US to recognize those events which didn't happen in America, but not slavery which did actually happen on American soil?

It appears that government would just like to pretend that slavery never happened because if the government acknowledges slavery, they'd also have to acknowledge reparations to slave descendants as well as all the lies and truths that came along with it. Our American history books would have to be completely re-written, and many races of people who were taught differently would suddenly become curious about the truth. When the truth is found out, Americans will begin to look at our government in a different light and not necessarily a positive one.

Can you imagine a Republican running for the presidency like Republican nominee John McCain, and loosing out on the White vote due to a bunch of lies resurfacing from the past? 

That's exactly what would happen if more people became educated with truth. Republicans don't want to loose the white vote and they definitely don't want to give trillions of dollars to African American descendants. Can the government even afford to give reparations? Black people have been stolen from for over 500 years; how do you calculate that?

I say all this to say the "N" word will probably never go away just like racism probably won't, but we can continue to hope and make sure that the ugly past doesn't repeat itself. And we can do that by voting the bad people out and the right people in.
2008 LA








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