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this is a discussion within the NFL Community Forum; Originally Posted by rezburna Hernandez will be fine in jail by the standards of being okay in prison. He put in work as they say. He's a Blood, so that'll give him added protection. Plus he's obviously no nonsense judging ...
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#1 |
1000 Posts +
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Re: Hernandez Guilty.
Originally Posted by rezburna
In reality, "the hood" is just a subjective term. Everybody has a way of describing certain neighborhoods. In places where there is a reputation for drug dealing and violence, that's what people call the hood. It's a reputation that is earned through the actions of these people. You don't have to live in that type of place to understand it. It's not a secretive thing.![]()
That doesn't mean every single person in a bad neighborhood is a gangster, but the facts still remain. A bad neighborhood is a bad neighborhood. But why does this matter in the subject of one man? He's a murderer. Does it matter how common it is? It's become all too common, but one is already too many. |
If I had a nickel for every time I heard that, the NFL would fine and suspend me.
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#2 |
5000 POSTS! +
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Re: Hernandez Guilty.
Originally Posted by burningmetal
That's kinda' my point with Hernandez and his gang affiliation. Anyone can get a tattoo, the guy grew up in Bristol, Connecticut for crissake ... 87% white population with a median income of approx. $58,000.00 ... hardly a hotbed of gang activity ... when did they find the time to jump him in? In between classes at Bristol High School? Or did they do it during his college football days? He was just allowed to run in certain circles because of his celebrity, IMO, and reveled in the notoriety/reputation of being a "gangsta" like many of his peers. He just had the nuts to pull the trigger a few times.![]()
It's a façade perpetrated by many in the rap and athletic communities and while may be considered "cool", is just counter-productive, IMO. Why can't these guys grow up saying, "I grew up in a decent neighborhood, halfway stable home/environment, went to school, applied myself, got an education, a job or professional career and am proud to be a productive member of society" rather than all the smoke-n-mirrors? Instead, it's more hip to try and be a gangbanger or Tupac, ![]() ![]() |
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#3 |
Donated Plasma
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Re: Hernandez Guilty.
Originally Posted by SloMotion
Consider that amongst all the real hippies that massed around Haight Asbury in the 60's, plenty of them, in fact in the beginning, probably the majority of them, were from upscale families or medium income families - kids that dropped in from Marin county or took their "vacation" to pretend to be part of that culture for a while.![]()
So I don't think it strange or unique to kids of the last few decades to be faux gangsters. Of course the big difference is sometimes they really eff up and do something amazingly stupid. It happened then too, only more often than not they destroyed themselves with drugs and not other people with guns. |
C'mon Man...
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