Dog was on Hannity last night, doing his official apology shit.
His explaination: "I thought I was considered cool enough by the black community that I could use that word. I think of black people as my brothers from another mother…(starts crying on-camera)"
Dog also brought his black pastor on to vouch for how much of a non-racist he is.
Last edited by Dolemite; 07 Nov 2007 at 06:00 PM.
Dolemite, the Bad-Ass King of all Pimps and Hustlers
Gymkata: I mean look at da lil playah woblin his way into our hearts in the sig awwwwwww
wtf lol
Dolemite, the Bad-Ass King of all Pimps and Hustlers
Gymkata: I mean look at da lil playah woblin his way into our hearts in the sig awwwwwww
The best part about the whole thing on Hannity was he went to see George Washingtons house, and asked to be burried in along with the unmarked graves of the slaves.
He's on Larry King tonight.
Dolemite, the Bad-Ass King of all Pimps and Hustlers
Gymkata: I mean look at da lil playah woblin his way into our hearts in the sig awwwwwww
As a black man, I want to endorse the fact that it's perfectly fine for a white man to exercise his freedom of speech by dropping "n-bombs." That said, if you aren't as ripped as Dog The Bounty Hunter, guard your grill, because if you say it around black people, expect to get justifiably smacked the fuck up.
What about if you have the deepest blue eyes a brother ever did see and you melt their hearts and open their minds with nothing more than a blink of your eyelids?
Originally Posted by rezo
And this is fine as long as you are willing to accept the effects and consequences. Sure, you personally can call me a pussy in person, but you'd better be willing to accept the consequences of doing so, because something will occur in response. You can't just expect to exercise this freedom and have no reaction. Life doesn't work that way. The only thing you're entitled to in life is an ass whooping.
Yeah, this guy is messed up:
"I thought that I was cool enough in the black world to be able to use that word as a brother to a brother," he said. "I'm not. I didn't know really know until three or four days ago what that meant to black people."
"I now learned I'm not black at all," Chapman said. "And I never did it out of hate."
"All black people in America I owe an apology to," Chapman said in the interview. "Whether, how dark I think I am, I cannot say that word. I owe the rest of the people, whether they are black or not in America, an apology because people look up to me."
"If I could kill myself and people would forgive me, I would do that," he said.
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