As long as Negros are down for the struggle, proudly wearing the victim mantle, they will continue to separate themselves from a successful, American Free Enterprise System. These Negro (how dark does one's skin have to be, or how wide does one's nose have to flare, or how thick does one's lips have to be, or how natty does one's hair have to be to qualify for being "Black?") college basketball coaches are doing a disservice to the the young Negro minds full of mush (as well to all of the other players on the team, who do not qualify as "Black" and are shamed into going along with this nonsense and accepting the guilty verdict against their race) to lift up the criminal George Floyd as a martyr worth emulating. George Floyd had been a documented loser since his youth, having appeared on TV as a teenager in Judge Judy's court for committing a crime, and had a violent criminal record. The mythical gospel of present day Systemic Racism against Negros in America, creates a false figment of one's imagination in these young men that all Negroes are victims, and will continue to be a legitimate excuse for illegitimate births, rampant illegal drug addiction, crime, murder and general laziness and a lack of personal responsibility. I saw Herschel Walker on O'Hannity and I agreed with everything he said and his outlook on the so called Systemic Racism. He may end of running for governor of Georgia and he said the most important job for a Governor is to solve the voting fraud issue in Georgia. Instead, white coaches should form an alliance to have a conversation with their black coaches and players to explain how BLM, Antifa, the fake media, globalists, communists, and the Democrat Party want to keep them on the "plantations" created by Democrats back in the 1800s.





Big 12 Black assistant coaches form alliance focused on education, support

Oct 27, 2020
Myron Medcalf
ESPN Staff Writer

In the days and weeks after George Floyd's death, Daniyal Robinson, an assistant for Iowa State men's basketball, said he thought about ways to make an impact among the athletes within his league. That led to conversations with other Black assistants in the conference and the formation of the Big 12 Black Assistant Coaches Alliance (BACA), announced Tuesday, and a platform with four initiatives: educate, unify, serve and support.

"We want to be an alliance and not necessarily a coalition," said Robinson, the chairman of the group. "Our main goal was to help serve our student-athletes better. Our student-athletes are hurting." (How are they hurting if they have their education 100% paid for?)

The official social media accounts from the schools in the league and the league itself tweeted the same announcement in unison to signify the arrival of the group, which currently features 40 men's and women's basketball assistants from the league and intends to link up with coaches in other sports, including football, in the coming months.

The group hopes to push voter registration, financial literacy, leadership skills and a partnership with police, Robinson said.

He added that every men's and women's basketball player (Negros only?) in the conference is registered to vote. He also said he hopes a partnership with police -- each program intends to connect with its local department -- will help eliminate stereotypes(meaning police should forget that Negro crime percentage far exceeds the 12% they represent as a race) and facilitate a relationship.

"I have insurance, and my plates are valid," Robinson said. "But when I pass a state trooper while riding with my sons, I get a funny feeling in my chest. I don't want to pass that on to my boys.The best way to do that is to engage in the conversation." (or address the Negro crime/rap music culture percentage in America?)

Leah Foster, the player development coordinator for TCU women's basketball, said she has received positive feedback from the players she coaches.

At TCU, players have been vocal about Atatiana Jefferson, a Black woman who was killed by a Fort Worth, Texas, police officer last year while she was babysitting her nephew in her home. Aaron Dean, the officer involved, was indicted on a murder charge. (of course he was. He is a white racist out to murder Negros!)

Foster said her athletes have conveyed that they've felt supported by the initiative.

"Being a Black female and being a Black, female coach, it's important that our Black, female student-athletes -- and males -- have positive role models and people they see who look like them," she said. (reference my earlier comments about skin color, nose, lips, hair)

Robinson said the group intends to become a resource for all coaches and student-athletes. The Big 12's support, which he sought through official channels, signals a long-term commitment to the cause by league officials, (guilty old white men, like outgoing Oklahoma State University President Burns Hargis) he said. Robinson pitched the idea on a video call with every athletic director in the conference.

"It was overwhelmingly supportive because of the engagement of our student-athletes," he said.

Foster said the group hopes to help athletes attain skills and experiences that will help them after they leave school.

"We want to give them things that they can use throughout their lives," she said. "Not just the next four years."


"All that the South has ever desired was that the Union, as established by our forefathers, should be preserved, and that the government, as originally organized, should be administered in purity and truth." – Robert E. Lee