Stacey And Kansas City Tuesday Night



Glamour hottie Stacey inspires us compile an important list of Kansas City links for the evening read. Here's a peek at topics that might inspire a few posts and comments later on . . .

Northeast Crime Meetup Tonight
Jolie Justus on Twitter
Social Justice And Local March
Lewis Diuguid: March sign of hope for KC
Football Fanboys Beg For Abuse
Fans' love for Andy Reid helps Kansas City Chiefs in Ultimate Standings
Another Kansas City Career Ruined
Jamaal Charles: Is Kansas City Chiefs RB's NFL Future In Doubt?
Better Local Football Legacy
Kansas City Chiefs help cancer survivors


And this is the OPEN THREAD for right now . . .

Comments

  1. Lewis Diuguid: March sign of hope for KC.......

    If there was any doubt as to the reason the KC Star has become irrelevant, look no further than Lewis Digahole. Negro is delusional. Bet him and that old shoe shiner, Brooks won't march down that street at night. Nope. They will be hidden better than a pussy trying to avoid TKC.

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  2. ^^^^^
    Funny, you must think somebody gives a shit what you think. Most of what Diuguid writes is abysmal but at least he's more interesting than TKC's blog trolls. Try singing Paul, I bet you have a beautiful voice.

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  3. 1135, yea. The "frequenters" on this site live with the delusional obsession that their life has meaning because they can f-bomb and hate on TKC.

    1052 is #1 on the list.

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  4. And this is the OPEN THREAD for right now . . .


    So like this sentence is only what a quarter of a century old now?

    Is this an AOL chat room or something?

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  5. Jolie Justus tweets. Governance by tweeter.

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  6. At least you know what you're going to get with Lewis. He's a black man, who hasn't been able to elevate his personal identity or professional product above his race. With him, it will always come back to race in most of his articles.

    As to the article itself, it seemed surprisingly balanced and self-aware. Brooks is quoted in the article as saying, "But black people kill each other at in far greater numbers than police or whites do, Brooks said. Yet, people protest the deaths of African Americans by police". "Why don’t we protest the killings of each other?" Brooks asked. "Who’s listening? Someone has to say something to pull together the conscience of the community."... It seems pretty in line with the dominant opinions usually expressed here.

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  7. In this, the latest installment from unrepentant racist blamer Lewis DoBad, we find Mr. DoBad writing about HIMSELF!!
    "On Saturday, Alvin Brooks and I wore artifacts..."
    "I had on a hooded sweatshirt..."
    "I’d kept the sweatshirt from the 1,000 Man March in Kansas City 20 years ago."
    "I expected to see others..."
    "What does that mean, Lewis?"
    "my partner Bette and I.."

    Hmm, isn't there a journalistic creed about reporting the story without involving yourself? Well, I suppose in Mr. DoBad's mind, that only applies to white journalists, while journalists "of color" can do whatever they wish because of historical discrimination and modern day "black privilege."

    But don't fear dear reader, for Mr. DoBad was able to slip in some truth when he wrote---"Tragically, we have lost our way."

    In recalling the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March, Mr. DoBad laments the---"the 45 million people living in poverty in the richest country on earth, the disproportionately high black unemployment and incarceration rates and unarmed African Americans killed by police nationwide." And yet, he can't bring himself to the realization that all of this has occurred in the 7th year of Barack Obama's administration. Better to let the painful truth remain unspoken, than to disturb the fantasy of forceful black oppression.

    I particularly enjoyed Mr. DoBad's unwitting descriptive phrase--"a hearse on the half-mile march to the Central Academy of Excellence"--as apropos for the liberal do-gooders mindset. As if, the inclusion of the word "excellence" in an institution's title assures it's desired outcome. Reminds me of the like-minded practice of calling all students "scholars", which of course only lowers the bar of expectation and defeats the original purpose.

    Leave it to Alvin Brooks to speak factually, when he's quoted in the following:
    "He was happy to see so many young people with us. They need the direction that adults should provide."
    "But black people kill each other at in far greater numbers than police or whites do, Brooks said. Yet, people protest the deaths of African Americans by police."
    "Why don’t we protest the killings of each other?" Brooks asked.

    Finally, as has become his peculiar habit, Mr. DoBad feels it necessary to inform readers that he has a "partner"----"On the walk back, my partner Bette and I.." But he doesn't tell us what kind of "partner" this Bette entity is, and what the significance of mentioning it is intended. Is Bette a business partner? A life partner for a non-committal black man? A pet companion? Who knows?

    What we do know with some certainty, is that Lewis DoBad is likely a moody depressive, inclined toward solitude and introspection, concluding that most of his shortcomings are surely the result of manifest systemic racism and that he is an innocent victim, irresponsible for his position in life. But a pawn, in a manipulated game of chess by hidden hands.

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