rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one, or recover it when possible. x


Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"
#1

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

This video might go viral...




Reply
#2

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

I really wish he would have so that we can be done with this fuck ASAP.
Reply
#3

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

Maybe he was going to say "nigga" as sort of a term of endearment?
Reply
#4

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

Haha I like that Roosh. That word is so twisted these days. I remember I had a buddy who was from North Carolina(white dude). Grew up in the hood out there, used the word, and it was cool because he was from that culture. He was a product of his environment. It was a term of endearment and we had no problem with it. Now almost every race has a little subculture that throws the word around like it aint shit. Which it isn't. From the vatos in Cali, to the Ricans in NY, to the hiphop subculture in Europe and Asia the word is a term of endearment.

That being said if Santorum said it, shit would hit the fan.

The cycle of disrespect can start with just an appetizer.
Reply
#5

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

I could only imagine the New York Times Opinion pieces if Santorum let it slip out.
Reply
#6

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

Politically correct terms and policies are IMHO ruining societies' fabric. Why call Obama a bi racial man, African American, black American, white American with an African father. He is American period. His passport says American. That is all that matters. As for that derogatory term, well if people would not take offense to it, it would lose appeal and disappear. As long as idiots and opportunists use anything or a term to put down or marginalize one group over another, this debate will go on forever.

I know some are sensitive to certain words. I am not a fan of the term white boy. I don't lose sleep over it, but I believe people when they feel marginalized or put down.

Had santorum said it, well people say stupid things, does that make him less qualified? George w said more silly things and held office for 2 terms. Obama had a commercial or sub campaign. Blacks for Obama. I wish santorum would have a campaign, whites or catholics for him that was mainstream. There would be a hoopla and that opportunist al sharpton would be in the news again.

Using derogatory terms is unacceptable and separating people based on faith, ethnicity all that is going to ruin America and any other society. As for the n word; well, whoever uses it to be cool, endearing or racist is further separating the divide between certain groups.

Opportunists will continue using it and slips or potential slips by public figures will still receive attention sadly.
Reply
#7

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

No doubt whatsoever that's what he was going to say. Maybe he had just come from this family's house:





Tuthmosis Twitter | IRT Twitter
Reply
#8

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

The guy's an idiot.

Generally, though, I side with the speaker who has been "gotchaed!"

If your job requires you to talk a lot, you end up saying nonsensical shit eventually.

It's just a hazard of the game.

It sounded to me, as sometimes happens to speakers, the computer in his brain had a glitch.
Reply
#9

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

Actually this has nothing to do with insulting Obama. It's all about pissing white males off who detest the subject of race. Obama's odds of winning are dependent on them. So expect to get a heavy dose of this crap along with affirmative action and all the other culture wars shit that's been put to bed....
Reply
#10

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

I think slipping up and saying something stupid, and uttering a slur, are two completely different things. It has nothing to do with political correctness either. To charge political correctness, what you said has to be an uncomfortable truth. Uttering a slur doesn't fit under that heading. I think the funny things are politicians getting caught near an open mike when they're speaking in profanities. That kind of thing is simply humans being human.

When Trent Lott was "humoring" Strom Thurmond at his birthday party by stating, "If this man had been elected President, we wouldn't be having all of these problems," even the white people in the room got kind of quiet. He was basically saying that things would be better in this country if a segregationist were elected. Sure, he hadn't thought out what he said, and in his mind he was just humoring the old man. But the greater message behind it was sickening. Combine that with Lott's own past (he was at the University of Mississippi when James Meredith, the first black student admitted there, was fighting just to get an education. Lott admittedly protested Meredith's admission, and his only response was, "Well, those were the times." He didn't really take any responsibility, or even admit his stance was wrong. He just basically said he kind of followed along. My point is all slips of the tongue aren't created equal. Sometimes that slip tells us a little more about the person that let it slip.

"The best kind of pride is that which compels a man to do his best when no one is watching."
Reply
#11

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

[Image: cOINR.jpg]
Reply
#12

Did Rick Santorum Almost Refer To Obama Using the "N-word?"

That's a good joke, Rah.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)