Page 10 of 11 FirstFirst ... 67891011 LastLast
Results 226 to 250 of 259
  1. #226
    bandwagon hater
    Post Count
    8,385
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    CBS's decision to fire Imus was logical from a business standpoint, but they shouldn;t have had to feel like they needed to do it in the first place. It was a bonehead comment no doubt, but why the do black people, like sharpton and jackson, feel like they have to attack Imus for saying the things he did when the notion of the hoe as something particularly black is constantly being promoted every day on the radio by their own people? It's double standard. It's sickening because hardly ever do ou hear about members of the black population, scuh as Jackson and Sharpton, ever being so concerned about what should be and shoud not be said about black women when black men say it. Are comments like the ones Imus said only innapropriate when there is racial disparity? If Sharpton claims that it is an attack on BLACK WOMEN than he needs to have every single rapper on his show apologizing for things they have said about black women. All party's need to be treated the same for their comments about women, otherwise it is only a matter of one person crossing the line not because of what he said, but because who was saying it.

    If it is really an issue about black women, Hip hop artists and entertainers who say this stuff need to suck sharptons ass
    exactly

  2. #227
    It's In The Numbers 1369's Avatar
    Location
    San Antonio, Texas
    Post Count
    5,138
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    What AOL Sports Jason Whitlock's Take Is

    I’m calling for Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, the president and vice president of Black America, to step down.

    Their leadership is stale. Their ideas are outdated. And they don’t give a damn about us.

    We need to take a cue from White America and re-elect our leadership every four years. White folks realize that power corrupts. That’s why they placed term limits on the presidency. They know if you leave a man in power too long he quits looking out for the interest of his cons uency and starts looking out for his own best interest.

    We’ve turned Jesse and Al into Supreme Court justices. They get to speak for us for a lifetime.

    Why?

    If judged by the results they’ve produced the last 20 years, you’d have to regard their administration as a total failure. Seriously, compared to Martin and Malcolm and the freedoms and progress their leadership produced, Jesse and Al are an embarrassment.

    Their job the last two decades was to show black people how to take advantage of the opportunities Martin and Malcolm won.

    Have we at the level we should have? No.

    Rather than inspire us to seize hard-earned opportunities, Jesse and Al have specialized in blackmailing white folks for profit and attention. They were at it again last week, helping to turn radio shock jock Don Imus’ stupidity into a world-wide crisis that reached its crescendo Tuesday afternoon when Rutgers women’s basketball coach C. Vivian Stringer led a massive pity party/recruiting rally.

    Hey, what Imus said, calling the Rutgers players "nappy-headed hos," was ignorant, insensitive and offensive. But so are many of the words that come out of the mouths of radio shock jocks/comedians.

    Imus’ words did no real damage. Let me tell you what damaged us this week: the sports cover of Tuesday’s USA Today. This country’s newspaper of record published a story about the NFL and crime and ran a picture of 41 NFL players who were arrested in 2006. By my count, 39 of those players were black.

    You want to talk about a damaging, powerful image, an image that went out across the globe?

    We’re holding news conferences about Imus when the behavior of NFL players is painting us as lawless and immoral. Come on. We can do better than that. Jesse and Al are smarter than that.

    Had Imus’ predictably poor attempt at humor not been turned into an international incident by the deluge of media coverage, 97 percent of America would’ve never known what Imus said. His platform isn’t that large and it has zero penetration into the sports world.

    Imus certainly doesn’t resonate in the world frequented by college women. The insistence by these young women that they have been emotionally scarred by an old white man with no currency in their world is laughably dishonest.

    The Rutgers players are nothing more than pawns in a game being played by Jackson, Sharpton and Stringer.

    Jesse and Al are flexing their muscle and setting up their next sting. Bringing down Imus, despite his sincere attempts at apologizing, would serve notice to their next potential victim that it is far better to pay up than stand up to Jesse and Al James.

    Stringer just wanted her 15 minutes to make the case that she’s every bit as important as Pat Summitt and Geno Auriemma. By the time Stringer’s rambling, rapping and rhyming 30-minute speech was over, you’d forgotten that Tennessee won the national championship and just assumed a racist plot had been hatched to deny the Scarlet Knights credit for winning it all.

    Maybe that’s the real crime. Imus’ ignorance has taken attention away from Candace Parker’s and Summitt’s incredible accomplishment. Or maybe it was Sharpton’s, Stringer’s and Jackson’s grandstanding that moved the spotlight from Tennessee to New Jersey?

    None of this over-the-top grandstanding does Black America any good.


    We can’t win the war over verbal disrespect and racism when we have so obviously and blatantly surrendered the moral high ground on the issue. Jesse and Al might win the battle with Imus and get him fired or severely neutered. But the war? We don’t stand a chance in the war. Not when everybody knows “nappy-headed ho’s” is a compliment compared to what we allow black rap artists to say about black women on a daily basis.

    We look foolish and cruel for kicking a man who went on Sharpton’s radio show and apologized. Imus didn’t pull a Michael Richards and schedule an interview on Letterman. Imus went to the Black vice president’s house, acknowledged his mistake and asked for forgiveness.

    Let it go and let God.

    We have more important issues to deal with than Imus. If we are unwilling to clean up the filth and disrespect we heap on each other, nothing will change with our condition. You can fire every Don Imus in the country, and our incarceration rate, fatherless-child rate, illiteracy rate and murder rate will still continue to skyrocket.

    A man who doesn’t respect himself wastes his breath demanding that others respect him.

    We don’t respect ourselves right now. If we did, we wouldn’t call each other the N-word. If we did, we wouldn’t let people with prison values define who we are in music and videos. If we did, we wouldn’t call black women es and hos and abandon them when they have our babies.

    If we had the proper level of self-respect, we wouldn’t act like it’s only a crime when a white man disrespects us. We hold Imus to a higher standard than we hold ourselves. That’s a (freaking) shame.

    We need leadership that is interested in fixing the culture we’ve adopted. We need leadership that makes all of us take tremendous pride in educating ourselves. We need leadership that can reach professional athletes and entertainers and get them to understand that they’re ambassadors and play an important role in defining who we are and what values our culture will embrace.

    It’s time for Jesse and Al to step down. They’ve had 25 years to lead us. Other than their accountants, I’d be hard pressed to find someone who has benefited from their administration.

  3. #228
    Maaaaaannnn fuck.... E20's Avatar
    Location
    California
    Post Count
    15,142
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Cal Bears
    Stuart Scott returned to ESPN Radio's Mike & Mike in the Morning Show this morning to revisit his previous comments that rappers and comedians who use the "n-word," the "b-word," and "ho" are different from Don Imus because they're using it in an affectionate way.

    Scott originally said that in a Wednesday appearance on Mike & Mike, and it was re-broadcast on Thursday. This morning, hosts Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic noted that Scott's comments caused a controversy and invited Scott to return to the show and explain himself. Today Scott said,

    "I didn't say that it's a good thing that these words are used in endearing expressions, and it's usually, it's mostly the n-word and the b-word, not so much the h-word. I didn't say that it's a good thing, but you can't disagree that it happens....

    "They are used like that by some people because they are taking a word, as I said, and they are taking the negative, ugly power out of that word, and they are making it something different."
    http://www.aolsportsblog.com/2007/04...s-a-good-thing

    It makes me mad when the double standard gets played. What is affectionate? I scoff and laugh at that BS and anytime when a double standard gets played it makes me furious -- that's why I side with Don Imus on this one. And there are LOTS of people with the same mentality as Stuart Scott on the above subject matter. It grinds my and makes my piss boil.

  4. #229
    adolis is altuve’s father monosylab1k's Avatar
    Post Count
    15,826
    NBA Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    College
    USC Trojans
    i think there's plenty of bull injustice that occurs against black people that white people shouldn't get so pissed that one of theirs got fired. Imus publicly embarrassed a group of undeserving girls, and now he's getting his come-uppance. Maybe it's getting taken too far, but tough . It's not like he's not still a rich white man. He's not magically turning into a black kid in the hood as punishment, he's losing his cushy job. It's so ing unfair that a rich white man lose his job even though he's basically all but got a big ass satellite radio gig awaiting him now. I really feel for the injustice he's been dealt here.

    to quote chris rock

    "white people are waaaaaaaaay too mad about this, black people are waaaaaaay too happy"

  5. #230
    Still Hates Small Ball Spurminator's Avatar
    Location
    Mav Country
    Post Count
    37,751
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    It makes me mad when the double standard gets played. What is affectionate? I scoff and laugh at that BS and anytime when a double standard gets played it makes me furious -- that's why I side with Don Imus on this one. And there are LOTS of people with the same mentality as Stuart Scott on the above subject matter. It grinds my and makes my piss boil.
    So you side with Don Imus but you still think calling a woman a "ho" is wrong?

    You sound confused.

    And that's the problem. So many people are making Imus a friggin martyr for some stupid cause because they can't stand Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Stuart Scott, or maybe just all black people.

    Like I said before, this brings out the worst in people.

    Why are we so determined to take sides when both sides are so full of ???

  6. #231
    Maaaaaannnn fuck.... E20's Avatar
    Location
    California
    Post Count
    15,142
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Cal Bears
    So you side with Don Imus but you still think calling a woman a "ho" is wrong?

    You sound confused.

    And that's the problem. So many people are making Imus a friggin martyr for some stupid cause because they can't stand Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Stuart Scott, or maybe just all black people.

    Like I said before, this brings out the worst in people.

    Why are we so determined to take sides when both sides are so full of ???
    Calling anybody something deragatory is wrong, but what makes me mad is why is it okay for Group A to say it and nobody gets in trouble, but when Group B does it in the same context it's wrong and repercussions follow. That makes me mad.

  7. #232
    Still Hates Small Ball Spurminator's Avatar
    Location
    Mav Country
    Post Count
    37,751
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    It would only make me mad if I felt like I should be able to call people nappy headed hoes without losing my job.

    Yeah, for now some people have license to spew ignorant crap, but it doesn't mean we should accept it from everybody until people of influence choose to address that. Maybe the one good thing that could come of this media circus is people will direct their attention to the way women are treated in the settings that influence hip hop.

  8. #233
    adolis is altuve’s father monosylab1k's Avatar
    Post Count
    15,826
    NBA Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    College
    USC Trojans
    for anyone ing about why 50 cent is allow to say nappy headed ho but Don Imus isn't, I offer this which I found on another forum. I think this guy makes pretty good sense.

    "First, rap music merely reflects what's really going on in poorer neighborhoods - right or wrong.

    Second, rap music doesn't single out 10 young girls and call them hoes...in other words, it's not personal.

    Third, and this is debatable, but IMUS had a following and was seen as a political platform for many. Rap music is pure entertainment - debased in some cases, but it's not generally seen as a credible source of news, information and politics.

    So, while I agree that rap music has warts and should change, it's not the artists who benefit. It's the white music execs, in most cases. Even if it's not, you can't equate rap music with IMUS.

    My point is that a WHITE person should be offended by his remarks. People want to make this into a white/black issue. So, in order to temper the argument they mention rap music. If a black announcer referred to these young women as nappy headed hoes, would it have been any less offensive? any more acceptable? NO.

    And by the way, listen to metal and other forms of music, it's not just in rap. It's how women are objectified on MTV. On soaps, reality shows, etc.

    So, while I agree that rap music should hold to a standard, it's clear that IMUS should be held to a higher one. Now when Jay-Z starts getting interviews with Tim Russert , McCain and Biden, then let's talk."

  9. #234
    Veteran AFBlue's Avatar
    Location
    Texas
    Post Count
    10,868
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Baylor Bears
    for anyone ing about why 50 cent is allow to say nappy headed ho but Don Imus isn't, I offer this which I found on another forum. I think this guy makes pretty good sense.


    "First, rap music merely reflects what's really going on in poorer neighborhoods - right or wrong.

    Second, rap music doesn't single out 10 young girls and call them hoes...in other words, it's not personal.

    Third, and this is debatable, but IMUS had a following and was seen as a political platform for many. Rap music is pure entertainment - debased in some cases, but it's not generally seen as a credible source of news, information and politics.

    So, while I agree that rap music has warts and should change, it's not the artists who benefit. It's the white music execs, in most cases. Even if it's not, you can't equate rap music with IMUS.

    My point is that a WHITE person should be offended by his remarks. People want to make this into a white/black issue. So, in order to temper the argument they mention rap music. If a black announcer referred to these young women as nappy headed hoes, would it have been any less offensive? any more acceptable? NO.

    And by the way, listen to metal and other forms of music, it's not just in rap. It's how women are objectified on MTV. On soaps, reality shows, etc.

    So, while I agree that rap music should hold to a standard, it's clear that IMUS should be held to a higher one. Now when Jay-Z starts getting interviews with Tim Russert , McCain and Biden, then let's talk."
    Snoop Dogg said the same things this guy said, but in less eloquent wording....it doesn't make his point valid.

    What he's saying is that it's okay for rappers to levy insults on young black women, because those young black women are deserving of the term, and those rappers are exempt from punishment because they do it for entertainment and are not respected.

    That's a load of . I'm sure plenty of America's youth (black and white, male and female) look up to and respect the 50 Cent's, Jay-Zs, Ludacris's, and Rob Zombie's (so you don't think I'm just targeting African American Rappers) WAY MORE than they look up to or respect a guy like Don Imus.


    I also disagree with one of the last statement this person in another forum said (underlined and bolded). If this was a prominent African-American radio figure, yes they would have been burned in the media, but I can guarantee they wouldn't have been fired. Two reasons why:

    1. The inevitable double-standard of, "well I am one, so I can say things like that".

    2. Because Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, and to some extent the NAACP need the causes they support to have African American victims and NOT HAVE African Americans that are part of the problem.

  10. #235
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    Location
    Hell
    Post Count
    57,943
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Texas A&M Aggies
    This country is ing re ed. With wars going on and real news out there what leads the news? Either some old white guy sticking his foot in his mouth about some nappy headed hos who hold press confrences to tell us they are in the process of forgiving Imus (whatever the that means) or who the father is of some dead white glorified stripper.

    ing idiots.

  11. #236
    Veteran 01Snake's Avatar
    Post Count
    4,540
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    This country is ing re ed. With wars going on and real news out there what leads the news? Either some old white guy sticking his foot in his mouth about some nappy headed hos who hold press confrences to tell us they are in the process of forgiving Imus (whatever the that means) or who the father is of some dead white glorified stripper.

    ing idiots.

    Just when the hoopla surrounding Anna Nichole died down we are now blasted with this Imus . Aren't there bigger concerns in the US (and the world for that matter) that we can turn out attention too?

  12. #237
    Veteran AFBlue's Avatar
    Location
    Texas
    Post Count
    10,868
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Baylor Bears
    Just when the hoopla surrounding Anna Nichole died down we are now blasted with this Imus . Aren't there bigger concerns in the US (and the world for that matter) that we can turn out attention too?
    I hear the Rosie-Donald Fued ratcheted up a notch...

  13. #238
    Agent Wonderbread j-6's Avatar
    Post Count
    4,284
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Texas Longhorns
    This country is ing re ed. With wars going on and real news out there what leads the news? Either some old white guy sticking his foot in his mouth about some nappy headed hos who hold press confrences to tell us they are in the process of forgiving Imus (whatever the that means) or who the father is of some dead white glorified stripper.

    ing idiots.


    You're right. If there was a cute blonde girl missing in Aruba or a runaway bride to talk about this Imus / Rutgers story might have never seen the light of day.

  14. #239
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    Location
    Hell
    Post Count
    57,943
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Texas A&M Aggies
    Just when the hoopla surrounding Anna Nichole died down we are now blasted with this Imus . Aren't there bigger concerns in the US (and the world for that matter) that we can turn out attention too?
    This coming from the guy who called OJ a pimp. You're just as bad if not worse dip .

  15. #240
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
    Location
    Hell
    Post Count
    57,943
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Texas A&M Aggies
    No , where is my missing blonde chick update?

  16. #241
    Dr. Pepper Johnny_Blaze_47's Avatar
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Post Count
    24,692
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    College
    Texas State Bobcats
    Hope springs.

  17. #242
    Veteran 01Snake's Avatar
    Post Count
    4,540
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    This coming from the guy who called OJ a pimp. You're just as bad if not worse dip .
    You got the wrong guy. I've never said OJ was a pimp. A murderer yes...pimp, no.

  18. #243
    Damn You Commies T Park's Avatar
    Post Count
    55,054
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Where is the apology from Jesse and Sharpton for the Duke Lacross players?


    QUESTION

  19. #244
    Purrrrrrrrrrrr Holt's Cat's Avatar
    Location
    Holt's House
    Post Count
    4,203
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    This country is ing re ed. With wars going on and real news out there what leads the news? Either some old white guy sticking his foot in his mouth about some nappy headed hos who hold press confrences to tell us they are in the process of forgiving Imus (whatever the that means) or who the father is of some dead white glorified stripper.

    ing idiots.

  20. #245
    Banned
    Post Count
    2,321
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    are they gonna go after the rest of the radio and tv and rappers, then internet people who say bad words? where does it all end? This is why womens basketball should not be on TV.

  21. #246
    Damn You Commies T Park's Avatar
    Post Count
    55,054
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs

  22. #247
    We are the Championship ggoose25's Avatar
    Location
    Amarillo
    Post Count
    1,623
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    what im left scratching my head about is... al sharpton and jesse jackson are preachers, shouldnt they forgive him now? and they refuse! I think that just exposes them for the bull hypocrites they are. There are so many better spokespeople for black...I hate that the media has anointed them "the black voice."

  23. #248
    Banned
    Post Count
    2,321
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Chris Rock and Ray Taliaferro are the real black voices.

  24. #249
    Veteran 01Snake's Avatar
    Post Count
    4,540
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Good Ol' Al Sharpton:

    TAX EVASION: In a 1988 interview, Sharpton said he saw no reason why blacks should pay taxes. “If we do not have a justice system that protects us, what are we paying for?” Sharpton has faced multiple charges—and one conviction—of tax evasion.

    TAWANA BRAWLY: 1987. Al Sharpton, during the infamous Tawana Brawley case, falsely accused a former assistant district attorney of raping and sodomizing Ms. Brawley. Young Tawana stated that white racists abducted, raped, and sodomized her, scrawling the initials “KKK” on her in human feces. A grand jury later found the entire incident a complete hoax. Most likely, Ms. Brawley, afraid of punishment for staying out too late, fabricated the entire story. This did not stop Reverend Al Sharpton, who accused Pagones an assistant district attorney, of the crime. “We stated openly that Steven Pagones did it. If we’re lying, sue us, so we can go into court with you and prove you did it. Sue us—sue us right now.”

    Pagones did. After receiving death threats, and threats against his child, Pagones sued Sharpton and two others for defamation. A jury unanimously concluded that Sharpton defamed Pagones, ordering Sharpton to pay $65,000 to Pagones. The Reverend promptly announced his intention not to pay. A couple years later, Sharpton’s buddies passed the hat and paid off Sharpton’s debt, which totaled $87,000 with interest and penalties. To this day, never having paid one penny of his own to Pagones, Sharpton refuses to apologize, “I did what I believed….They are asking me to grovel. They want black children to say they forced a black man coming out of the hard-core ghetto to his knees….Once you begin bending, it’s ‘did you bend today?’ or ‘I missed the apology, say it again.’ Once you start compromising, you lose respect for yourself.”

    CENTRAL PARK JOGGER: In 1989 “the jogger,” a young white woman, was monstrously raped and nearly beaten to death in Central Park. Sharpton insisted—despite the defendants’ confessions—that her black attackers were innocent, modern-day Scottsboro Boys trapped in “a fit of racial hysteria.” Sharpton charged that the jogger’s boyfriend did it, and organized protests outside the courthouse, chanting, “The boyfriend did it!” and denouncing the victim as “ !” He brought Tawana Brawley to the trial, to show her “white justice” and arranged for her to meet the attackers. Sharpton appealed for a psychiatrist to examine the victim, generously saying, “It doesn’t even have to be a black psychiatrist….We’re not endorsing the damage to the girl—if there was this damage.” (While it doesn’t excuse his calling the victim a “ ” and denigrating any damage to her, or his accusations against the boyfriend, the convictions of the accused were eventually vacated, despite their taped confessions, after another man—whose DNA matched—confessed to the rape in 2002.)

    CROWN HEIGHTS/ “DIAMOND MERCHANTS”: In 1991, Gavin Cato, a seven-year-old black child was killed in a traffic accident in Crown Heights (in Brooklyn), when a car driven by a Hasidic Jew went out of control. Sharpton turned it into a racial incident. Sharpton led 400 protesters through the Jewish section of Crown Heights, with one protester holding a sign that read, “The White Man Is the Devil.” There were four nights of rock- and bottle-throwing, and a young Talmudic scholar was surrounded by a mob shouting, “Kill the Jew” and stabbed to death. A hundred others were injured. Sharpton said, “The world will tell us that [Gavin Cato] was killed by accident….What type of city do we have that would allow politics to rise above the blood of innocent babies?…Talk about how Oppenheimer in South Africa sends diamonds straight to Tel Aviv and deals with the diamond merchants right here in Crown Heights….All we want to say is what Jesus said: If you offend one of these little ones, you got to pay for it. No compromise. Pay for your deeds.” Later Sharpton said, “If the Jews want to get it on, tell them to pin their yarmulkes back and come over to my house.”

    ARAFAT: When Sharpton announced a 2001 trip to the Middle East, Rabbi Shmuley Boteach helped plan his itinerary. Sharpton, according to the Rabbi, promised not to meet with Yassir Arafat, yet only days later, Jewish New Yorkers opened the morning paper to see a smiling Arafat and Sharpton, meeting and shaking hands in Israel. Furious, Rabbi Boteach said, “Prior to our recent trip to Israel, U.S. black leader Reverend Al Sharpton and I discussed several times that there were to be no meetings with Arab or Palestinian leaders, not because I wished to set preconditions for our travel, but because the express objective of our mission was to show solidarity with Israeli victims of terror. The idea was to provide a magnanimous gesture of friendship and solidarity with the Jewish nation that would hopefully have strong reverberations for the relationship of the Jewish and black communities back home.”

    FREDDY’S FASHION MART/”WHITE INTERLOPER”: 1995. A Jewish store owner in Harlem was accused of driving a black record store owner out of business, when the United House of Prayer, one of the largest black landlords on 125th Street, raised the rent on the Fashion Mart owned by a Jew, Freddy Harari, who then raised the rent on his subtenant, Sikhulu Shange, who ran a record store. At one of many rallies meant to scare the Jewish owner away, Sharpton said, “…There is a systematic and methodical strategy to eliminate our people from doing business off 125th Street. I want to make it clear…that we will not stand by and allow them to move this brother so that some white interloper can expand his business.” Following a demonstration three months later, one of the protestors, a black man, stormed Freddy’s Fashion Mart with a pistol, screaming, “It’s on now! All blacks out!” In addition to shooting, he set fire to the building, eventually killing himself and seven others. Initially, Sharpton denied having spoken at any rallies. When tapes surfaced, he said, “What’s wrong with denouncing white interlopers?” Eventually, he apologized—but only for saying “white,” not “interloper.”

    OUT OF THE KING MOVEMENT: Although he was 14 when Martin Luther King was assassinated, Sharpton claims he “came out of the King movement.” Sharpton once explained, “I was on some show this week, and people said, ‘Why don’t you just let it go? Why don’t y’all just get over it?’ Get over what? Get over Dr. King dying? Get over Medger Evers dying? Get over Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner dying? Get over those four girls in Birmingham dying? We are never gonna get over it, and we are never gonna let you forget it!”

    FBI TAPES/COCAINE: In 2002, HBO aired a 19-year-old FBI surveillance of Sharpton with self-described mobster Michael Franzese and an undercover FBI agent posing as a Latin American businessman. The three were discussing promoting boxing matches and musical events. HBO’s “Real Sports” got a hold of a hidden camera video that shows undercover agent Victor Quintana posing as a drug dealer trying to convince Sharpton to play a middleman in a big cocaine buy.

    Sharpton asks the undercover agent, “What kind of time limit are we dealing with?”

    “Coke?” the agent asks.

    “Yeah.” Sharpton says.

    The phony drug dealer says, “Could be about the same time we have 4 million coming to us.”

    Sharpton: “End of April?”

    “End of April. Six weeks from now. Is that a good time you think?” the agent asks.

    “Probably,” Sharpton replies.

    Later on, the undercover agent offers Sharpton a finder's fee for help with the drug deal and says to Sharpton, “I can get pure coke for about $35,000 a kilo ... Every kilogram we bring in, $3,500 to you. How does that sound?” Sharpton nods in response.

    The deal never went down, and Sharpton has said he was just playing along because he was scared of the would-be kingpin. “And I'm in his office. I don't know whether this man is armed. I don't know what's going on. So I kind of say, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah,’ to get out of there,” Sharpton claimed the tape was leaked by law enforcement officials to disrupt his 2004 presidential run, and he sued HBO, its parent company AOL Time Warner, and several individuals who worked on the story. No charges were ever brought against Sharpton because of the tape, which was allegedly made to get Sharpton to act as an informant for the feds into an investigation into corruption by Don King and the boxing industry. The HBO report featured former Mafia captain Michael Franzese saying that the FBI was on the right track when it targeted Sharpton in a sting back in 1983 to try and root out corruption in boxing.

    Sharpton admitted in 1988 that he informed for the government in order “to get rid of drugs and election fraud” in black neighborhoods. He denied informing on civil rights leaders and organized crime figures.

    FBI TAPES/DONATIONS: After Sharpton’s name surfaced on wiretaps in an unrelated Philadelphia City Hall corruption case, the FBI launched a probe into Sharpton’s fund-raising for his failed 2004 presidential run. The FBI secretly videotaped Sharpton on May 9, 2003, pocketing campaign donations from two “shady fund-raisers” in a NY City hotel room, and then demanding $25,000 more. The two fund-raisers were La-Van Hawkins and the late Ronald White. Hawkins is currently on trial in Philadelphia on corruption charges. White was going to be indicted, but died before charges were brought. A later wiretap recorded Hawkins telling White that they had raised more than $140,000 for Sharpton the previous quarter, but Hawkins was concerned that Sharpton had only reported about $50,000 to the Federal Election Commission, as required by law. Sharpton said the allegations were a “politically motivated smokescreen” to hide the fact the Justice Department is out to get him. He ripped the probe and the secret videotaping, saying, “Can you imagine what would happen if it was a white presidential candidate?”

  25. #250
    Banned
    Post Count
    2,321
    NBA Team
    San Antonio Spurs
    Sharpton must have some good lawyers and friends or else he be in jail like the poor peoples.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •