• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

WTF happened?

loomixguy

Well-known member
Earlier today it dawned on me that I haven't heard ONE THING this year about our, cough, latest PC fake holiday, Kwanzaa. It's not on any calendar I have, not a word about it on TV...nothing. So WTF happened? Did it fall off the face of the earth, did blacks realize how stupid and fake azz it was, or have the blacks been too busy rioting, looting, and murdering white cops to give a sbit about Kwanzaa this year?
 

Mike

Well-known member
Just you wait..........It's coming.

Kwanzaa 2014 begins on
Friday, December 26
and ends on
Thursday, January 1

Willie ALWAYS brings me a big bottle of "Old Forrester" for Kwanzaa. :lol:
 

loomixguy

Well-known member
I don't own a calendar, boughten or freebie, that says, shows, states, or implies when Kwanzaa is, starts, ends, or exists.
 

Steve

Well-known member
Traveler said:
Steve said:
Traveler said:
"Happy Holidays" has it covered. :wink:

Kaweezie is not a holy day..
Merriam Webster calls it a nonreligious African American holiday. :lol:

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/kwanzaa?show=0&t=1419335858

How can it be a non-religious Holy Day?

as we dumb down our education we see the results.. many forget what a word actually means.. or worse were never taught what it actually means,..
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
Kwanza actually has some great principles IF practiced and not just celebrated but even in them there is a promotion of non-similation and more segregation of their society from the general population

The Seven Principles (Nguzo Saba) of Kwanzaa are:

Umoja (oo-MOH-jah): Unity Success starts with Unity. Unity of family, community, nation and race.

Kujichagulia (koo-jee-chah-goo-LEE-ah): Self-Determination To be responsible for ourselves. To create your own destiny.

Ujima (oo-JEE-mah): Collective work and responsibility To build and maintain your community together. To work together to help one another within your community.

Ujamaa (oo-jah-MAH): Collective economics To build, maintain, and support our own stores, establishments, and businesses.

Nia (NEE-ah): Purpose To restore African American people to their traditional greatness. To be responsible to Those Who Came Before (our ancestors) and to Those Who Will Follow (our descendants).

Kuumba (koo-OOM-bah): Creativity Using creativity and imagination to make your communities better than what you inherited.

Imani (ee-MAH-nee): Faith Believing in our people, our families, our educators, our leaders, and the righteousness of the African American struggle.
 

iwannabeacowboy

Well-known member
loomixguy said:
Looks like blacks are doing/following the exact opposite of this. :roll:

I don't know. I think maybe many communities are following this type thinking, it's just that these are the results, not unity, not peace, not prosperity.

Faith in yourself, faith in people, and faith in a skin color is pretty silly. If people are fallible, why would you put your faith in them? Same for yourself?

The outcome for the method seems quite rational. Applies to all races, all socioeconomic situations

I think I'd find something infallible to put my faith in, maybe then abundance and prosperity would follow.
 

Tom in TN

Well-known member
Isn't it amazing that the whole thing of kwanza is a bigoted, racist, black-superiority thing that gets a complete pass by our political leaders.

Substitute "Northern European" into the seven principles in place of "African", and see how long it would take for Mr. Obama and Mr. Holder to throw a hissy-fit.

The hypocrisy of liberalism is predictable but disgusting.

Tom in TN
 

loomixguy

Well-known member
I got a Corgi calendar as a Christmas present from daughter #2, and it DOES have the 2015 dates for Kwanzaa on it. But I have not heard or read one thing about it this year at all. Murder & mayhem has overshadowed it.[/quote]
 

Latest posts

Top