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matr1x wrote:Sorry about your grandparents Gladiator. Your grandad was a friggin hero. Those 2 guys had a choice and made the grave they slept in
What we can't explain....or control ..we include God in the sentence.matr1x wrote:Sad thing is, people still believe in God. Fairytales don't save lives
matr1x wrote:But let's be honest, afro workers are creepers. Heard a black worker ask an indo worker if he would let's his son date his daughter. The daughter is 10. The indo man shrug he shoulders and say no.
Les Bain wrote:All ulyuh talking bout afro and indo, but glorification of the ghetto lifestyle expanded it past the afro community. The well off, fair skin children jump on the bandwagon but is just a bandwagon: they get off eventually and go foreign while Raj and Kwame get ketch in the life til age, popo or their gunta peers feed them some lead.
Dat sounds like Mouttxmero wrote:Les Bain wrote:All ulyuh talking bout afro and indo, but glorification of the ghetto lifestyle expanded it past the afro community. The well off, fair skin children jump on the bandwagon but is just a bandwagon: they get off eventually and go foreign while Raj and Kwame get ketch in the life til age, popo or their gunta peers feed them some lead.
Once is not too late.
Ghetto life seems like fun for many non ghetto ppl cuz they could just go back in dey mummy home, turn off the badness and put on cold breeze and sleep. But plenty get caught up cuz they ain't ready for the conquences
Ghetto life easy to capitalize on and mooch off, everybody want to know a badman from a zone to call up dey name in petty arguments. Latest slangs, protection from a gunta bredren,dances, trends, food..pose with big roll on in dey mouth.... to show off on tik tok. Always been the case. Like if it's almost a strategy
Redress10 wrote:Where the syrian/lebanese and local white voices in all of this.
Seems that black/brown people always have to shoulder the burden of bettering the country whilst the other groups hide away and silently profit.
MarlonSam wrote:society needs to be extremely careful now:
https://www.facebook.com/TrinidadBandit ... 6529548353
these people like they in training...
one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
One eyeone eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
Dave wrote:I also think given we had two in quick succession with similar details had ppl in an uproar state of mind.
one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
Dohplaydat wrote:one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
Yea we saw FordeG say the same.
In reality, the reason for the uproar is that this young was young, innocent-looking, educated, and by all accounts a very simple kind gentle person.
No offense to many other innocent women who were killed, but this one pulled our heart strings.
matr1x wrote:Sad thing is, people still believe in God. Fairytales don't save lives
bluefete wrote:Dave wrote:I also think given we had two in quick succession with similar details had ppl in an uproar state of mind.
But this one is definitely different. I don't know why but it has awoken the minds of people in a very different way.
I am feeling it on the ground unlike any other.
MaxPower wrote:matr1x wrote:Sad thing is, people still believe in God. Fairytales don't save lives
Slim,
There is still a God.
If you have not spoken to God, now is the time to do so.
One may ask, why talk to God now? Why talk to God when things are bad or when i want something?
Get down on your knees, look above and open your arms and say thank you and start with that.
one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
His Imperial Majesty Jah RasTafafiaaron17 wrote:MaxPower wrote:matr1x wrote:Sad thing is, people still believe in God. Fairytales don't save lives
Slim,
There is still a God.
If you have not spoken to God, now is the time to do so.
One may ask, why talk to God now? Why talk to God when things are bad or when i want something?
Get down on your knees, look above and open your arms and say thank you and start with that.
and may I ask which is the religion to follow?
Nah baiLes Bain wrote:one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
If that is what you took away from this case after following all the details like the rest of us and getting the accounts of the father-daughter relationship, something is wrong with you, you dotish racist jackass.
zoom rader wrote:Nah baiLes Bain wrote:one eye wrote:If it was a girl of African descent, there wouldn't be this much uproar but its an Indian girl so everyone come out of their caves like hungry gremlins.
When so much African girls went missing and was never found in the past, nobody gave a f*ck.
This situation shows prejudice people of this country are.
God did not give humanity the power to weigh a soul over another but since she was wearing a UWI graduation outfit she is deemed better than the rest of the population.
Something is seriously wrong with individuals on this site.
If that is what you took away from this case after following all the details like the rest of us and getting the accounts of the father-daughter relationship, something is wrong with you, you dotish racist jackass.
One eye correct
The African community does not seem to show concerns when their kind go missing or locked up in jail.
The African community needs to bond together instead of only coming together for elections
All these African groups only after Money be it the ,
Emancipation Support Committee
Fat arse brigade
Black agenda
Red government
They show no support for Africans
Women's group alliance calls for action: Tears are not enough
AN alliance of social actors in a statement on Monday called for an urgent national action plan against gender violence, saying it was not enough to just mourn murder/kidnap victims Andrea Bharatt and Ashanti Riley.
The Alliance for State Action to End Gender-based Violence includes the Coalition against Domestic Violence, the Institute of Gender and Development Studies (UWI, St Augustine), CAISO, the FPA, PLOTT, WINAD, YWCA, CAFRA, Workingwomen and Womantra.
The alliance said in its statement: "Words are not sufficient to express our collective grief on the murder of Andrea Bharatt. We hold her family and her friends in our hearts and offer our deepest condolences."
Women are at risk for physical and sexual violence in homes and on the streets, the alliance lamented. "Violence against women and girls is a national emergency and should be treated as such.
"Whilst we have had some signs of progress, as a country we still do not have a co-ordinated plan to prevent and respond to this terror that stalks women’s and girls’ lives."
The group lamented some men's use of violence to express power and control over women, as linked to gender inequality and sexist attitudes and behaviours.
"Too many men continue to receive the message that being a man means being dominant, being the 'head of household,' being in charge, having access to women’s bodies whether there is consent or not, and controlling women’s lives."
One in three women has experienced domestic violence, and one in five has been sexually assaulted, the alliance said.
"These statistics come as no surprise to women who must be on high alert on the streets, in the workplace, and in public transportation because sexual harassment can quickly escalate into physical and sexual violence.
"Too many women have shared, just in the past week, stories of the terror faced in travelling to and from home each day for work, the fear of doing day to day tasks that should be simple, and the grief and anger of yet another woman missing, now murdered."
Women know of too many women and girls still missing.
"It is not enough to grieve for Ashanti Riley, for Andrea Bharatt and for the many girls who have gone missing, been kidnapped or been killed. It is not enough to grieve for Suzette Sylvester, killed by her husband. We must act."
This is an obligation for the whole of society, it said, but with the onus most heavily on those with the power and responsibility to make the difference.
"For government, we repeat our call for a national action plan which is accompanied by a budget.
"This plan should improve policing, it should fund shelters, and it should improve judicial services so that we have a system in which delay is not endemic."
The group said the education system, from early childhood education to university, must include messages of gender and sexual equality and respect, so teaching practice is infused with empathy and care. It urged an end to corporal punishment, saying the use of violence to discipline entails more harm than good.
"We have to take seriously the need for a gender-sensitive transportation policy that takes women’s greater use of public transportation and real vulnerability getting to or from work or to their families."
Organisations involving men should take serious responsibility here.
"Today we ask male leaders and male dominated institutions, what are you doing? What are you saying? How are you acting to make the world a more equal and safe space for women?
"We call on men to organise a public show of solidarity at this time when women need to know that men are committed to a world in which they are safe from men’s violence against women."
This should be done not because women are men's mothers, sisters, "tanties" or daughters, but because women are human beings, equally entitled to lives of dignity, peace and safety.
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