Thursday, September 2, 2010

T.I. AND HIS UGLY WIFE GETS LOCKED UP!

ITS ONLY WEED!!!!!




Rapper T.I., who is in the top box office movie Takers, and wife Tameka Cottle were arrested late in Los Angeles last night on drug charges.
Police smelled marijuana coming from their Maybach on Sunset Boulevard during a traffic stop, reports TMZ, and pulled the car over - just as Las Vegas police did to Paris Hilton and her boyfriend.
Atlanta-based T.I., 29, whose real name is Clifford Harris Jr., and Cottle, a 36-year-old singer with the group Xscape, were booked at the West Hollywood sheriff's station and bail was set at $10,000, reports AP. T.I. served seven months in an Arkansas federal prison and three months in a Georgia halfway house on federal weapons charges and was released in March.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Obama signs Crack cocaine vs Cocaine Powder law

Today, President Barack Obama signed into law the Fair Sentencing Act. This law reduces the disproportionate disparity in punishment given to those convicted of possessing crack cocaine versus those found with the drug in cocaine powder form.
Prior to today, if a person was convicted of having one gram of crack cocaine in his possession, he would received a mandatory five years prison time. A person with powder cocaine must have 100 grams to get the same mandatory sentence of five years. Hence, the 100:1 ratio.
The Obama's Fair Sentencing Act law narrows the ratio from 100:1 to 18:1. Although, Obama's law is a step in the right direction; he could have done much better by reducing the ration to 1:1.
President Obama campaigned on a platform that included closing the sentencing gap. From the beginning, the unbalance crack 100:1 ratio was targeted towards African-American. Crack cocaine users tend to be mostly poorer, African Americans or Hispanics. Powder cocaine users are usually white blue-collar suburbanites. The reality here is, a crack is a crack is a crack.
The Fair Sentencing Act, was introduced by Illinois Senate Dick Durbin. According to Durbin, “We have talked about the need to address the crack -powder sentencing disparity for far too long. With the Fair Sentencing Act now the law of the land, we’ve finally addressed one of the greatest injustices in our war on drugs,” Durbin said. “Drug use is still a serious problem in America and we need tough legislation to combat it. But in addition to being tough, our drug laws must be smart and fair. This bipartisan bill is both.”

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Why is everone worried about "haters"??

What is the big deal about "haters"? Why do people get mad talking about they got haters and they love their haters. I don't want any so called haters. I want everyone to love me.

What is the drive behind racism in America?

Seriously!!! I need someone to help me understand. Everywhere I go on the internet I see it. Everywhere I go in the community I see it. Even on Youtube. You tube is for watching and posting videos that an individual wants to watch. So why are there so many racists comments in rap artist's videos. There were several people who posted 20 or more comments and responses to comments. If you hate black people so much why are you commenting and posting so many comments on that video? Your making that person more and more famous. You do not have to watch that video. The same for white supremacist videos on youtube. That is their business. Why are you, as a black person, watching and repeatedly commenting on such nonsense. You are just fueling it. If black people didn't care that racist white people hated them and vice versa this country would be a much better place.