the nyc daily news

Jesse Jackson calls for an end to the use of the word "Ni gg er." But there is a problem …?
professional complainer and shakedown artist Jesse Jackson is in the news again. Today, in California, along with the congressional black Maxine Waters, an official called "The End" for the use of the word "or GG ER "for all peoples. This is of course the same Jesse Jackson referred to New York as a city" Hymie "(a racial slur against the Jews) and the same Jesse Jackson, who acknowledged the "60 Minutes" as a young chef, he used to spit in the food of white patrons (an action against the white racists.) Now, he called all people to stop using the word "GG NI e r." application is not the beginning ban rap artists and hip hop to use the term black ad naseum? Does the young blacks refer to each other by all termn days? From there follow its racist roots and require non-blacks to follow this maximum? Does the double standard enjoyed by black Americans is questioned or that the status quo of the two laws (one for whites and easier for blacks) to continue?
He is so full of shit, which keeps down the black community and the problem is that not even see it! This is a guy who has published the black Burger King Corporation, giving money or others who announce they are racist because they have a certain percentage of black employees «"?!?!? And it has done several other companies and is one of the most racist people I hear in the news today, need to start talking with rappers if you want to kill the word, are they who keep alive and thriving
NY Daily News Reporter Recounts Meeting with Obama at Arlington National Cemetery
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MotherLode $16.95 … |
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The Savage City: Race, Murder, and a Generation on the Edge $3.95 Amazon Best Books of the Month, March 2011: One part police procedural, one part historical narrative, T.J. English’s The Savage City: Race, Murder, and a Generation on the Edge follows three different men caught in the fallout of New York City’s most turbulent decade as race relations, corruption, and crime reached a stormy head. English traces the events that shook the city to its core during th… |
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Portraits: 9/11/01: The Collected Portraits of Grief from The New York Times $30.00 Poignant and personal remembrances, celebrating the lives of the World Trade Center victims.Few aspects of The New York Times’s coverage of September 11 and of all that has followed have attracted as much comment as “Portraits of Grief.” A page or two buried deep in the B section every day for 15 weeks, the series profiled the lives lost in the attacks on the World Trade Center and has become a st… |
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New York Noir: Crime Photos from the Daily News Archive $29.95 When Ruth Snyder was electrocuted at Sing Sing Prison in 1928, New York Daily News photographer Tom Howard was there–with a miniature camera he’d hidden under the cuff of his pants. The resulting snapshot made the front page the next morning (under the headline “DEAD!”) and provoked fierce controversy among those wondering if tabloid journalism had finally gone too far. But, as Luc Sante points o… |
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