You don't mean it, but it was a great thing. I dunno if you associete it with some other stuff, but it obviously has nothing to do with it, not by itself.
dude I’m so drunk right now and I do not know why but this video like made my cry like language can be such an evil tool used by people to oppress but people can rise up against they can find hope in something that was used to keep them down for so long I like know I’m way over examining but this is beautiful
@Rocketeer lmao it’s just likes. You’re like those people who thanks other for their likes when they get over 1k. It’s literally nothing my guy. I got a few comments with 5k where I say borderline r3tarded sh¡t
Yeah and the crazy thing is it’s so simple and right in our face like how has no one made this joke until now. Like I tried looking it up and this the only comedy skit about this.
Egyptians Hellenes and Romans did wrote about them in history thought so we do know more but it depends of how much somebody is interested in learning.
@carloareaser that's the point YOU can't use it😂😂😂😂 the only you can use it is behind the anonymity of a keyboard. We don't get offended we just like the fact that you can't say it and you won't say it in our face and yall only want us to stop saying it because you can't say it 😂😂😂
@@alexnlmbb I'm hispanic and I'd say it really depends. For example, I used to work at a pizzería in Maryland and every employee there was black (mind you there were only about 6 ish employees). I eventually got used to the... Ambience(?) and slowly "earned" the respect to say the word. It just kinda naturally rolled off my tongue by mistake once and everyone was fine with it, so I kept on saying it (only to them, and I never missused or overused the word). So I'd say if you're Hispanic, you still get the privilege to say the word only if you earn it. Not sure if this is relevant, but I'm also not even that dark skinned (profile pic for a "decent" reference)
@@AmityHardstyle it’s not for anyone but black people. Just because a few people didn’t say anything doesn’t mean it’s ok for you to use it. Ain’t no such thing as “earn the respect to say it”.
Okay... I laughed... But props to the cameraman and the editors! I actually go to film school, so I don't actually watch movies and stuff without picking them apart. Although this was supposed to be a skit, it really was reminiscent of the cinematography of Spike Lee or even the Hughes Brothers in the 90s. The music also helped give it that throwback feeling. I know that this was put together for a good laugh, but collectively, whoever worked on this is talented! Keep it up!
@@John6-40 90% of whites didn't own slaves, hope America gets nuked so rest of the world doesn't have to deal with your cultural imperialism by destroying race, gender or tradition even further.
@Militant Milk Man Dragon ball - Goku has no idea what mercy is and kills everyone without remorse Dragon ball Z - Goku is obsessed with fighting now but doesn't kill his opponents unless their truly evil or lazy in his eyes and thinks everyone wants to fightDragon Ball super - Goku us less obsessed with fighting and a little more carefree. He understands some people have other goals from him and realizes fights aren't always for fun and some are for your life. Even now he's still learning about it
"if we take back the word it don't harm us no more!" Fast forward to every black person getting mad of a white person calls in it😂 I feel like the words still hurts you😂
It clearly hasn't worked since the N-word is now considered the most offensive word in the English language in the U.S and the UK. The harm is still there. The word should've just died out, like it did in other languages.
@@XxSouIxX its not really there its the fact that everyone is offended if a white person says it but black people say it constantly with no repercussions
Mister Knightley A possible reason for that is that it’s not actually the same word, it’s pronounced and spelled differently. So what’s really happened is that there’s now a word that originated from the slur, the slur still has all the power it once had.
After reading the comments I came to the conclusion this is brilliant because I felt the same as everyone else and it was emotionally profound. You should win awards for this.
Yu Yu up in this bih, my.....................friend. Me and my son were binge watching this morning before dropping him at school. Kuwabara is my spirit animal solely because he never snitched. Even gettin cheeks clapped for his rival's sake, they couldn't force him to. Loyalty is a rare thing in real life. That hit deep and most important to me. Phenomenal writing for 90's content and awesome all around anime, didn't consume the manga though.
I've always wanted to ask a black guy about the first time he ever heard the word and the first time he learned the meaning of it. I am willing to bet that they heard it first from another black person. I highly doubt that black people these days ever heard the term coming from a non-black person the first time they ever heard it in their lives. We live in a world where if a non-black person hears their kid say the word while growing up, they would smack the kid and teach them not to say it. Black people, LET THIS GO. YOU WON ALREADY.
It’s a masterpiece because it actually represents the reality of how it happened, albeit not necessarily as this video portrays it. The realisation of not allowing a word, or a psychic burden control you, is liberation itself-but it requires you facing it. The whole loosening use of the word had a therapeutic effect on the people who actually suffered.
From the early accounts that I've read, it was used by elders to remind youngsters that they were powerless when they got riled up and angry about their plight as a misguided way to kind of protect them from themselves. As in, "you're just a no account worthless n***...". I think it's detrimental to keep it up. I hate the term because it is still used to this day to divide God's children.
This is not how it happened... white people didnt come up with the word nigga. Black people have been calling eachother black since the beginning of time... negro, niger, kemet, moor, dubh, etc.