I understand the need for "Empowering Males of Color", but the tone of this is exclusive offensive

Anonymous
Protip anything that divides on race is racist blacks can be just as racist as whites

Chocolate city era is long over
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Protip anything that divides on race is racist blacks can be just as racist as whites

Chocolate city era is long over


"If a white man wants to lynch me, that's his problem. If he's got the power to lynch me, that's my problem. Racism is not a question of attitude; it's a question of power." - Stokely Carmichael

The difference make sense now?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Protip anything that divides on race is racist blacks can be just as racist as whites

Chocolate city era is long over


Pro tip anyone who thinks that this is relevant to the discussion is probably a bigoted imbecile.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Cool, cool. Let invite your white son to the how not to get killed by the police talk too..

I am white and female. Every child I know, male and female, black and white and anything else, gets a series of police talks while growing up.


You’re missing the point. By a mile.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Cool, cool. Let invite your white son to the how not to get killed by the police talk too..

I am white and female. Every child I know, male and female, black and white and anything else, gets a series of police talks while growing up.


How many times has a cop pulled a gun on you?
Anonymous
Not everything is for you OP.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Cool, cool. Let invite your white son to the how not to get killed by the police talk too..

I am white and female. Every child I know, male and female, black and white and anything else, gets a series of police talks while growing up.


How many times has a cop pulled a gun on you?


4 times but I was with Black kids each time growing up in Silver Spring and up to no good. To be fair it happened during a large bar fight in Frankfurt while in the army too but then cops mostly focused on the Turks .
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Cool, cool. Let invite your white son to the how not to get killed by the police talk too..

I am white and female. Every child I know, male and female, black and white and anything else, gets a series of police talks while growing up.


Really? In my very mixed family the black males got the talk, the white males did not nor did any of the females.
Anonymous
Send your dumb ass kid somewhere else then.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Cool, cool. Let invite your white son to the how not to get killed by the police talk too..

I am white and female. Every child I know, male and female, black and white and anything else, gets a series of police talks while growing up.


How many times has a cop pulled a gun on you?


4 times but I was with Black kids each time growing up in Silver Spring and up to no good. To be fair it happened during a large bar fight in Frankfurt while in the army too but then cops mostly focused on the Turks .


The fake shit on the internet is fun.
Anonymous
n January 2016, 16 DC Public Schools from across the city received Empowering Males of Color Innovation Grants to help young men of color excel through academics, social-emotional development, and family engagement.

OP look at the link

https://dcps.dc.gov/page/empowering-males-color-innovation-grants

Dumb ass
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If u don't like then u prob shouldn't live in a "chocolate city"


It ain’t Chocolate City anymore.


DCPS enrollment is 80% black and latino. Whites are 15%. "Other" (Asians?) is 5%.


So DCPS is hosting events for the majority of their population and not treating the minority equally? Seems to go against the ideals of the civil rights movement. Or was that wrong?


again with the good faith questions! wow!


So no answers to the question why DCPS would marginalize their minority students?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If u don't like then u prob shouldn't live in a "chocolate city"


It ain’t Chocolate City anymore.


DCPS enrollment is 80% black and latino. Whites are 15%. "Other" (Asians?) is 5%.


So DCPS is hosting events for the majority of their population and not treating the minority equally? Seems to go against the ideals of the civil rights movement. Or was that wrong?


again with the good faith questions! wow!


So no answers to the question why DCPS would marginalize their minority students?


it’s such a good faith question it has its answer embedded in the question! wow!
Anonymous
OP and the ALM Army need to SIT DOWN.

EMOC started in 2015 and REIGN in 2017. If this email is the first time you heard about it, then you have not been paying attention. Google Ron Brown High School. I'll wait...and Google Ron H Brown while you're at it.

Go ahead and call the ACLU. Protip - Google ACLU and EMOC first.

Just like Black Lives Matter didn't start in 2020. It's only when white people get uncomfortable that they pay attention.

For extra credit, Google the difference between equity and equality.

EMOC/REIGN is about building equity in order to achieve actual equality.

Y'know, that whole pull yourself up by your own bootstraps thing? Can't do that if someone else keeps putting their foot in at the same time.

OP, Stop clutching your pearls and try paying attention.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If u don't like then u prob shouldn't live in a "chocolate city"


It ain’t Chocolate City anymore.


DCPS enrollment is 80% black and latino. Whites are 15%. "Other" (Asians?) is 5%.


So DCPS is hosting events for the majority of their population and not treating the minority equally? Seems to go against the ideals of the civil rights movement. Or was that wrong?


again with the good faith questions! wow!


So no answers to the question why DCPS would marginalize their minority students?


Uhhhh...because they can afford to now thanks to grants.
Where the hell have you been the last 5 years?

2015
D.C. schools to invest $20 million in efforts to help black and Latino male students
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dc-schools-to-invest-20-million-in-efforts-to-help-black-and-latino-male-students/2015/01/21/27450ca8-a19d-11e4-903f-9f2faf7cd9fe_story.html?tid=a_inl_manual

2018
Mayor Bowser launched the EMOC and Reign initiatives to close the opportunity gap by providing strategic programming and supports so young people of color can thrive. This school year, DCPS invested more than $400,000 in Reign and EMOC at the following schools:

Bancroft Elementary School (Ward 1): Reign grant to start an ethnic studies course after school, and math and literacy enrichment.
Cardozo Education Campus (Ward 1): Reign grant for monthly workshops with young women, the Michelle Obama mentoring program, and a showcase of all of the organizations that provide support to young women throughout the District.
Columbia Heights Education Campus (Ward 1): EMOC grant for a mentoring program and to host events focused on the physical, mental, financial, spiritual, creative, and social emotional development of students.
Eastern High School (Ward 6): EMOC grant for a mentoring program, SAT preparation, and college tours.
Excel Academy (Ward 8): Reign grant to support the all-girls band, a fine arts program, and other social emotional supports for students.
Johnson Middle School (Ward 8): Reign grant to host monthly workshops on social emotional learning, self-care, and other topics impacting young women.
Kramer Middle School (Ward 8): Reign grant for a mentoring program focused on entrepreneurship and to promote social emotional development through workshops and seminars on self-esteem and self-care.
LaSalle-Backus Education Campus (Ward 4): EMOC grant for a mentoring program and an arts integration character development program.
Stanton Elementary School (Ward 8): EMOC grant for programming focused on developing hope, self-discipline, integrity, and love in their young kings through mentoring, academic enrichment, and experiential learning.
Truesdell Education Campus (Ward 4): Reign and EMOC grants for the Elite Scholars program for young women and men, and an empowerment retreat to foster teamwork, character development, and leadership.
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