Has 'Black-Girl Magic' Lost Its Mojo?
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https://www.amren.com/podcasts/2024/12/has-black-girl-magic-lost-its-mojo/
Jared Taylor is worried. After the Kamala defeat, black women have given up on saving America. Taylor also discusses strange doings in New York City, ways to scam whitey, and how the shadow of Trump looms over illegals.
Thumbnail credit: Ivan Radic via Flickr, CC BY 2.0
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(Republished from American Renaissance by permission of author or representative)
He may bring in millions of more Indians from India. I do not see him trying to remove any of the other illegals that have been welcomed into this country
Why would anyone expect Donald Trump to do anything to help anyone but himself or his donors? He is simply a gangster and an actor. He has been playing a lucrative role.
Jared could instead visit new grounds and review that Iranian movie on Trump and his gangster lawyer Cohn friend.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Apprentice_(2024_film)
Obviously there was never such a thing as “Black Girl Magic.” “Guilty White People Overcompensating,” however, is a very real and persistent phenomenon.
Since Donald Trump first ran for President, the “Pennsylvania Gazette,” the University of Pennsylvania alumni magazine, has been curiously reticent about him. When his name crops up in an article about economics or politics, the editor dutifully inserts “(W/’68),” indicating that Trump graduated from Penn’s Wharton School of Business in 1968. That’s about it. No hit pieces and certainly no laudatory pieces.
Just as surprising if not more so is Elon Musk’s alumni status at that institution. Like Trump, he was a transfer student and spent his junior and senior years at Penn. With a double major in economics and physics, he was awarded a degree in 1997.
Normally, having two alumni who are so highly influential in both politics and business, becoming global celebrities along the way, would be something an institution would crow about. Not so for Trump and Musk. Had they fought the good fight to invent more civil rights for marginalized people or advocated bringing more people from the Global South to the Global North, the “Pennsylvania Gazette” would have sung their praises many times over.