nigga nigga nigga and what go that is what she said and then responded, i have been made aware of the video circulating of me on social media, and i am heart broken, because i have friends of all ethnicitys and also singing a trinidad song and she believes there need s tos to be context to everything. ben ferguson, what do you believe? well, one of the fra tern the ti brothers said it right, the word needs to be be dead and it is not going to be in a sopg and it should be dead and as he said to miss bee, it should be dead and never, ever use it again and it should not with be in a words of a song that people are going to be singing to, and it is not should be in a song and miss bee should not be
have you considered you re affecting the stereotype the master gave the nigga? maybe i went too far. this kid in a school uniform no longer than 7 years old was crying his eyes out as he walked down the sidewalk with his mother. i m going to be honest here. she turned to him and said, i m sick of you you act like an old ass man. stop all that crying, nigger. is that taking the word back? now number three. respect with you live. stop small, stop dropping trash. i ve lived in several predominantly white neighborhoods. i live in harlem now. every day i see adults and children dropping their trash on
be by black people because they re not going to have it like that because that s a racist word. okay. so chadwick, to you first. just today, i m having lunch with a friend. he said he was at dinner last night with a group of people. one of the guys said to him, he s half puerto rican, the other guy said hey, what s up, my nigga. he said what did you say? he said he was offended by it. not just black people say this word to each other. do you agree with rachel jeantel that it s okay for anyone to say n-i-g-g-a? anyone, no. i think black people can use the word with the a ending just because it holds a lot of meaning derogatory meaning behind it and it s hurtful. i don t think anyone can use that word. but young people use that word. don t tell me you don t. no, i do, i do. so you use it but you wouldn t want to use a white
mind you around 2000s that was not they changed it around i think. it starts spelling n-i-g-g-a. nigga what does that mean to you, that way of spelling it? what does that word mean to you? that means a male. a black male? no, any kind of male. black or white? any kind. chinese could say nigga. that s my chino nigga. they could say that. and rappers and everything use it in the music and that s they use it. what they mean. but nigger is not about black people because they re not going to have it like that because that s a racist words. they re two different words and they have different meaning in your community. no. in a generation, 2000s. to young people you mean? not young people. old people use that too. well, the jury, they see
to trayvon and say do you have do you need a problem? do you have a problem? do you need help? like normal people. do you feel that your testimony strongly impacted the case at all? yes. in a negative way? no. it might have said why her education or why she kept it too honest. but people too honest. you can t be too honest. you can t say cracka, nigga, all this, and the jury s so shocked, what i said. and they re acting like the generation we got now don tay that. all right. let s talk generational. let s talk about this tough