| In America, racism requires institutionalized de-facto socio economic religious and government participation to prevail above Non-Racist belief. Racism and its definitions have many core causes. Racial genocide create conditions where genocidal policies are nurtured and enumerated for Negrophiles[1] to commit homicide with-out reprise, nor investigation of it’s homophobic root causes. My analysis have concluded that the majority of African American politicians choose to contribute to the demise of public civil rights - in America. More often the psychosocial problem - African American politic and Police disgracefully endorse:
- African American men maintain disproportionate U.S. prisoner status, and,
- African American religious institutions, welcome African American women's capitulation with out-of-wedlock-child-birth disproportionately, and that;
- African American GENOCIDE is performed principally by convicted felons that are African American men of incomplete prison terms, released back into the same community to commit more heinous murder of Americans, race based mercenary killers.
Respectfully, the government's targets unknowingly participate in their demise through conditions which, in-fact produce and encourage genocidal vehicular homicide as demonstrated here by it's african american public = mass disregard for african american saftey on streets in D.C.'s communities. [1] Definition: Negrophilia; [American blacks public exhorting "N" pejoratives: psychosocial race; hate: blacks self-emasculation; based upon sexual indiscretion and extreme homophobic bi-sexual preference of life style, extreme intercourse/ nymphism (sexual) relational associations.] GANGSTA MISOGYNY http://www.albany.edu/scj/jcjpc/vol8is2/armstrong.html Copyright © 2001 Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture All rights reserved. ISSN 1070-8286 __________________________________________________________________________________________________________ "Both ethnomusicology and postmodern ethnography are accomplished by classification and categorization (Manning 1995)." [1] [1] Manning, Peter K. and Mahendra P. Singh. 1997. "Violence and Hyperviolence." Sociological Spectrum 17: 3 (July/September): 339-361.__________________________________________________________________________________________________________ |