Quote from TGregg:
And who cares if they do sustain. Plenty of homies generally means high prices, crappy service and low quality. The race ratio is a pretty decent indicator of value and it is easy to use.
It's funny. Years ago, the libtards thought white folks disliked black folks because they were taught all this evil stuff by their culture. "If only we could expose white folks to lots of black folks, then the white folks would see that the black folks are just like them!" Went the misguided libtard mantra. Then we had decades of busing and integration and all the rest of the mixing of the races. `Cept it didn't work out like the left expected. Turns out white folks were right.
Now it's hysterically funny to think anything like that. Now black folks and white folks know white folks are far better to be around, that white folks are more likely to do the right thing and black folks are far more likely to rape, rob and steal. And it sure has pissed off the black folks. Way to go, libtards! As I frequently say, there's no problem so damn big that government cannot come along and make it even worse.
Decades ago, white folks thought blacks sucked hairy moose balls in school coz they came from disadvantaged families. So they pumped money into the blacks and gave them all the advantages of the white folks plus more.
This trick worked but only up to fifth grade. After fifth grade no nifty trick could help the blacks keep up with the whites.
Now you could make all kinds of excuses errr I mean "arguments" hehe as to why this occurred.
But the whites noticed something very interesting. When they looked at the Asians, it didn't matter whether they came from the poor, middle, or upper class. The academic performance was comparable to whites.
Whites give Asians nada but somehow they can go to Harvard.
Here's a recent story of an Asian dude abandoned by pop on welfare going to Harvard.
Read and weep mes amis.
This type of story has been going on for an eternity.
You folks dun know coz you don't read Asian newspapier.
There was a Vietnamese dude who came to America in ninth grade. Knew no Inglish. Managed to learn some and cranked out a 1600 pofect score on the SATs and when to Harvard. Now some Korean chick got like 2360 or 2380 on the new SATs a few years ago. Amazing thing is she never went to school in America. I guess this blows away the argument that SATs are racist and white.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/06/poor-california-teen-harvard_n_3397471.html
California Teen Who Was Abandoned By Dad And Grew Up Dirt Poor Headed To Harvard (VIDEO)
Jun 06, 2013
His dad abandoned him when he was a baby and he grew up destitute, but no amount of hardship could keep Lloyd Chen from fulfilling his ultimate dream â- going to Harvard.
The Laguna Creek High School senior â- who was named valedictorian and graduated with a 4.79 GPA last month â- was accepted with a full scholarship to nine competitive universities, including Yale, Harvard, Princeton and MIT, according to CBS Sacramento. But the road to his astounding success wasn't an easy one.
After his mother, Susie Yun, emigrated from South Korea, her husband left her to take care of Lloyd and his two sisters on her own, KCRA reported. Money was so tight that Yun would often drop Chen off at school and sit in her car for the remainder of the day until he was ready to go home, because she couldnât afford to pay for gas.
While Chen had the grades, and the impressive extracurricular activities â- he was co-president of the mathletes and vice president of the key club, according to FOX 40, he was still surprised that so many top universities were vying for his enrollment.
âIt was so shocking and so gratifying,â the star student told CBS. âAnd it was just a blessing.â
Chenâs perseverance is incredibly inspiring, but he wonât be the only member of the class of 2017 to have faced incredible financial challenges while growing up.
David Boone, 18, will also be attending Harvard in the fall and he, too, faced many daunting challenges along the way.
When he was 14 years old, gang members destroyed his Cleveland home because he refused to join their group, Boone wrote in a blog for The Huffington Post. He and his siblings were then split up, because his mother couldnât afford to buy a new house and he ended up spending many nights sleeping on park benches.
"All of these life lessons have shaped me into who I am, transforming my dreams and aspirations and allowing me to free myself from what was becoming an unproductive environment," Boone wrote in his blog.
Chen shared a similar sentiment about how each individual has the power to shape his or her future.
âIt is your choice to have a fulfilling life -- as it puts the burden on you,â Chen said in his graduation speech, according to KCRA. âBut it also gives you the power to do something about it. So do it.â