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#1
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that
Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? |
#2
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by African Americans?
On Saturday, June 14, 2014 6:00:12 PM UTC-7, Bill Cosby wrote:
I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? Yes. FOAD. HB |
#3
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by African Americans?
On Saturday, June 14, 2014 7:07:16 PM UTC-7, Higgs Boson wrote:
On Saturday, June 14, 2014 6:00:12 PM UTC-7, Bill Cosby wrote: I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? Yes. FOAD. HB This is not about greeting cards and merchandise, though it is true that Mothers, Fathers, Grandparents, dogs, cats, etc. Days are "invented by stores to sell merchandise" ...and restaurants to beef up customers. This came across to me as a sly slap at Black families. Didn't ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? They are more likely to be poor; more likely to have male members arrested and imprisoned far more than whites for the same offense; more often headed by a female; more often have children attending underserved schools w/o the best teachers, and on & on. Maybe they have bigger worries than buying greeting cards for a commercial "Day" HB |
#4
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
Higgs Boson wrote:
This is not about greeting cards and merchandise, ... This came across to me as a sly slap at Black families. Didn't ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? You seem surprised that those that responded are as dumb as a sack of hammers. But even you missed the point. ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? Black families? That's hillarious. To have a family, a real family - you need a father. And in any given black household, what you will usually not find is - a father (or - "the" father). Hence the idea that "Father's Day" in the African American community is a strange concept. vile aspersions Hey, don't shoot the messenger. Go look up the numbers for yourself. |
#5
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by African Americans?
Bill Cosby "Bill.Cosby"@We cant blame white people any.longer wrote in
: Higgs Boson wrote: This is not about greeting cards and merchandise, ... This came across to me as a sly slap at Black families. Didn't ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? You seem surprised that those that responded are as dumb as a sack of hammers. But even you missed the point. ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? Black families? That's hillarious. To have a family, a real family - you need a father. And in any given black household, what you will usually not find is - a father (or - "the" father). Hence the idea that "Father's Day" in the African American community is a strange concept. vile aspersions Hey, don't shoot the messenger. Go look up the numbers for yourself. +1 on that. It's my understanding that black "families" do make a big deal of mother's day and also have a "WhoDat" day instead of Father's Day. You know: Moma, who dat man in yo bed? |
#6
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 6/16/2014 9:44 AM, BillyBobT wrote:
+1 on that. It's my understanding that black "families" do make a big deal of mother's day and also have a "WhoDat" day instead of Father's Day. You know: Moma, who dat man in yo bed? Isn't that practiced every day of the year in some cultures? -- .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. |
#7
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by African Americans?
On Mon, 16 Jun 2014 08:26:58 -0400, Bill Cosby "Bill.Cosby"@We cant
blame white people any.longer wrote: Higgs Boson wrote: This is not about greeting cards and merchandise, ... This came across to me as a sly slap at Black families. Didn't ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? You seem surprised that those that responded are as dumb as a sack of hammers. But even you missed the point. ANYBODY pick up on the vile aspersions cast on Black families? Black families? That's hillarious. To have a family, a real family - you need a father. And in any given black household, what you will usually not find is - a father (or - "the" father). Hence the idea that "Father's Day" in the African American community is a strange concept. vile aspersions Hey, don't shoot the messenger. Go look up the numbers for yourself. There is a sizeable portion of the black american community where the father is not in evidence, and a growing portion of the American white community where the same is true. There is also a very sizeable American Black community where the fother is VERY present, and contributes significantly to the family dynamic, and the welfare and education of his children. Sadly there is a smaller and smaller part of the white community where this is true. |
#8
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
Using improper usenet message-composition style,
unnecessarily full-quoted: There is a sizeable portion of the black american community where the father is not in evidence, There is also a very sizeable American Black community where the father is VERY present Make up your mind. That's a good example of double-speak you've got going there. --------------- http://www.reuters.com/article/2007/...19185720070614 Father absence "decimates" black community in U.S. By Joyce Kelly CHICAGO Thu Jun 14, 2007 More than 19 million children -- about one in four -- were living in households where no father, biological or other, was present, according to a Census Bureau report in 2005. The statistics also show that this burden falls more heavily on black children. Some 56 percent of black children lived in single-parent families in 2004, with most of those families headed by mothers. That figure compared with 22 percent of white children and 31 percent of Hispanic children. ----------------- Not much has changed lately for blacks, but what has gotten worse is that in general, even more US children don't have a father (at least not a father that's raising them as part of a family unit): ----------------- Dec 25 / 2012 Fifteen million U.S. children, or 1 in 3, live without a father, Though income is the primary predictor, the lack of live-in fathers also is overwhelmingly a black problem, regardless of poverty status, census data show. Among blacks, nearly 5 million children, or 54 percent, live with only their mother. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/...rica/?page=all ----------------- And now I'll conclude with this happy report: ------------------- The Black Family Is Worse Off Today Than In the 1960's March, 2013 A new report released by the Urban Institute finds that the African-American family has declined across almost every measure since the 1960's. According to a report released by the Urban Institute, the state of the African-American family is worse today than it was in the 1960's. Before you become offended and charge, “What about the White family?!” The report also discloses that families of all ethnicities are showing a decline; however, the African-American household has suffered the worst decline. Plus, YourBlackWorld.com offers you news specifically about the state of Black America, so, our focus will be on the state of the African-American family. In 1950, 17 percent of African-American children lived in a home with their mother but not their father. By 2010 that had increased to 50 percent. In 1965, only eight percent of childbirths in the Black community occurred out-of-wedlock. In 2010 that figure was 41 percent; and today, the out-of-wedlock childbirth in the Black community sits at an astonishing 72 percent. The number of African-American women married and living with their spouse was recorded as 53 percent in 1950. By 2010, it had dropped to 25 percent. The original report titled “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action,” was released in 1965 by the late New York Sen. Daniel Moynihan. Moynihan, who was the assistant labor secretary at the time of the report’s release, laid out a series of statistics on the African-American family. Moynihan, in his report’s conclusion declared, “at the heart of the deterioration of the fabric of Negro society is the deterioration of the Negro family. It is the fundamental source of the weakness of the Negro community at the present time.” Sadly, the outlook of the African-American family is more bleak than when Moynihan wrote his conclusion. “An analysis of national data indicates that little progress has been made on the key issues Moynihan identified,” wrote Gregory Acs, of the Urban Institute, in a statement released with the report. “Further, many of the issues he identified for Black families are now prevalent among other families.” The Urban Institute’s report also added to the original scope of the Moynihan report to include the rate of incarceration, employment, and educational attainment in the African-American community. “Since the Moynihan report was released, another major social trend has put further strains on Black families — the mass incarceration of Black men,” Acs said. “By 2010, about one out of every six Black men had spent some time in prison, compared with about 1 out of 33 white men.” A demographic breakdown by race was not available for the 1965 report, but numbers beginning in 1974 showed disproportionate numbers of African-American men being sent to prison. In 1974, it was nine percent of Black men compared to one percent of white men. By 2010, that had risen to 16 percent of Black men and three percent of white men. The report did note that number has started to decline slightly among Black men. http://www.yourblackworld.net/2013/0...-report-shows/ ------------------ Happy Father's Day to you, Mr. Cosby. |
#9
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 06/14/2014 09:00 PM, Bill Cosby wrote:
I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? Father's Day is just another commercial holiday invented by retailers to sell more merchandise. Did you get that new Binford 6100 gizmo you always wanted? |
#10
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 6/14/2014 9:00 PM, Bill Cosby wrote:
I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? Fathers Day is an unofficial holiday in Kenya. And here in America, there are plenty of websites and stores selling African-American Fathers Day cards. So some blacks are celebrating it. -- Steven L. |
#11
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 6/14/2014 6:00 PM, Bill Cosby wrote:
I was reading something the other day that seemed to indicate that Fathers Day is not really celebrated in the African American community. Any thoughts or comments on that? I guess track school is on break where Bill lives................... |
#12
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On Sat, 14 Jun 2014 21:00:12 -0400, Bill Cosby wrote:
Any thoughts or comments on that? It's a cultural thing. Same reason they can't speak English properly. |
#13
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 06/29/14 10:30 am, Lance Echolot wrote:
Any thoughts or comments on that? It's a cultural thing. Same reason they can't speak English properly. I have yet to meet an American of whatever colour -- black, white, brown, or brindle -- who can speak (or write) English properly. Perce |
#14
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Is it true that Fathers Day is not really celebrated by AfricanAmericans?
On 6/29/2014 1:28 PM, Percival P. Cassidy wrote:
I have yet to meet an American of whatever colour -- black, white, brown, or brindle -- who can speak (or write) English properly. Perce Smashing good, what? Whilst I don't wish to think ye barmy, I dinah ken tell ye blokes nattering, bloody rubbish. -- .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. |
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