Tag Archives: black women
Drug Addicts Getting Paid Not To Have Kids
Drugs can be a problem, especially in the lower tax brackets and it’s even worse in when kids are in the mix, but how do you challenge that without challenging rights? Exactly, the U.S. solution to everything: money.
The group, Project Prevention, hangs stark ads in clinics and homeless shelters to reel in drug users. The posters feature hard-hitting taglines such as, “Don’t let a pregnancy ruin your drug habit,” and “She has her daddy’s eyes … and her mommy’s heroin addiction.”
Barbara Harris, founder of the program, insists she is only trying to help prevent unwanted pregnancies, which often lead to children being fed into an overwhelmed foster care system, and that she’s not forcing anyone to get sterilized.
New Gang of Sperm Hunters?
It’s a new dawn for feminism and women’s rights, it’s a new day where men have to fear women. No, not for their amazing ability to drain every ounce of self-esteem from a man with one back handed compliment and a cold meal; no, now it’s because women are officially on the hunt – for semen.
Susan Dhliwayo claims she pulled her car over recently to pick up a group of male hitchhikers and they refused to get in, because they feared they were going to be raped.
Wifi Named “F*ck All Jews and N*ggers” in NJ
A 28-year-old mom was with her daughter at dance recital and noticed on her wifi that one of the available signals was named “F*ck All Jews and N*ggers.” After reporting the name to the local authorities the police tracked down the “bigot” to punish him for what we assume was just using too many characters in the name field.
The offending signal was coming from a router connected in the Richard Rodda Community Center in the township, located 10 miles outside New York City.
“When I first saw it, I said, ‘Did that say what I thought it said?,” said the woman, who asked that her name not be used.
“I was shocked, hurt. I felt harassed.”
The signal showed on her phone as it searched for an Internet connection in the center Tuesday.
“I felt like I’m bringing my daughter to this place, and it should be a safe place,” she said.










