Felixorfelicia 1,798 Posted August 11, 2021 Share Posted August 11, 2021 I mean yeah his way of thinking is very much baked into the minds of a lot of people, it’s societal as well as upbringing. If your parents or surroundings think a certain way it’s likely you’re having the same ideas and opinions. I work with a bunch of men and i hear stuff like this and worse daily. BUT, while everybody was waiting for some kind of apology, some forced one was put out on instagram, and didn’t even STAY there…i mean we learn this at like age 3. He didn’t even have to actually say sorry, a social media post is enough nowadays. But even that was too much. Like come on..if he doesn’t even wanna pretend he’s sorry..does he really care? I think not Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
SevenWonder 4,298 Posted August 11, 2021 Share Posted August 11, 2021 Hey Nick: I know this might be hard to fathom, but DaBaby IS NOT THE VICTIM here. Thanks! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
latina twilight 2,319 Posted August 11, 2021 Share Posted August 11, 2021 Ofc he was going to defend his *$$ On 8/9/2021 at 6:40 PM, Teletubby said: Nick suggested a lot of men have difficulty with apologizing since it can be seen as a form of “weakness.” "First of all, I think not only in the Black community - and I've experienced it - but definitely just men a lot of times, we have that ego. We believe apologizing is weakness when it actually takes great strength to step up to anyone and say, 'I was wrong,'" Lame. Just f*cking apologize, it's not easy for everybody, but straight men always be crybabies about it. On 8/9/2021 at 6:40 PM, Teletubby said: "To say 'I'm sorry,' that's a self-proclamation. To apologize is an action. And to actually repent or atone is actually the next level because now you're trying to understand, there's education involved with that, there's actually community involved with that. And that's the other thing too, where I challenge all these people who actually want to cancel somebody, and even specifically in DaBaby's situation, let's use this as an opportunity for education. Because that's what happened in my scenario." This is a moment where we should all gather around DaBaby and embrace him because if we can do that, watch how many mentalities will change in the hip-hop community." Education? "We"? That's HIS job. HE is a grown man. "YOU USED TO BE SO KIND, I NEVER KNEW YOU HAD SUCH A DIRRTY MIND". Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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