Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life

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pmg911

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #40 on: June 03, 2016, 10:16:41 AM »
Plenty of people who are born into similar situations and avoid robbing and shooting people. Jordan is s gangster. He is where he belongs

So you don't think its a problem that "Plenty of people are born into similar situations"? Just because everyone isn't like that doesn't mean many would not be. It's a mentality, regardless of his gifts. Not everyone has the capacity to get smacked in the cheek and turn to him the next. At some point you have to say the problem isn't limited to what action the individual takes, although they should still be held accountable for them, but you also have to start thinking.. Why are you smacking him in the cheek? 

Or stop having children if you do t have the means,desire or maturity to raise them properly. At some point, people have be responsible for themselves and stop blaming society, their own parents etc.


Pointing out faults in a social system doesn't mean I'm not for accountability. Self responsibility is important. To overcome social issues however you have to acknowledge certain constructs exists which contribute to a social culture. Someone is going to fall within that segment of the population, it has nothing to do with personal choice. If everyone in the United states had an MBA that would mean there would be a large portion of the population with MBA's living at/near/or in poverty. Education and hard work does not necessarily equate to economic prosperity. There isn't an infinite amount of high paying jobs, regardless of your education and/or work ethic. Some of us are more fortunate than others which perpetuates the belief that anyone can do it. However true in theory that may be, that isn't true for everyone. Stay strong Rysheed, hope you use this experience as a spring board to a better future.

Been trying avoid commenting on this thread because its tragic what happened to this kid and there is no need to pile on here...

That said. . Rysheed Jordan is a bad kid and has been a bad apple since his high school days... amazing talents but he was either too dumb or just didn't care to use his abilities to help his family break the cycle they were in. He had the golden ticket for himself and his family and threw it away.

This is a kid that traveled the country playing basketball and saw first hand all the things that his hard work might deliver to him if he made right choices.

Blaming the social cycle and the circumstances he was born into is ridiculous and part of the problem in America today. Not saying there are not issues in America but I am sorry, they just don't apply here.

This kid saw the world around him in which he grew up. . crime, drugs, criminals, people off to jail, etc....  then he was handed the chance to get out on a silver platter. All he had to do was make the right choices and he did not , He choose to keep going back home, to stay in the cycle..   he chose to stop going to class, to walk away from his education and basketball opportunities..

There are plenty of kids in similar situations who don't make the awful choices he did.

The day he picked up a gun, he knew where it might lead and he obviously didn't care.

Poison

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #41 on: June 03, 2016, 11:35:41 AM »
He should be given a second chance after he is released from prison.

SJUFAN

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #42 on: June 03, 2016, 12:35:41 PM »
"Blaming the social cycle and the circumstances he was born into is ridiculous and part of the problem in America today."

How many times during your youth have you had to rummage through trash to find a meal to eat? Or sleep outside in the rain? Don't underestimate the circumstances that faces some of our youth today and the impact it can have on their thought process.

"This kid saw the world around him in which he grew up. . crime, drugs, criminals, people off to jail, etc......All he had to do was make the right choices and he did not , He choose to keep going back home, to stay in the cycle.."

You make it sound as if that should be a deterrent for a child. For some, yes, but if all you saw was crime, drugs, criminals, jail, etc.. growing up you may not see it as a bad thing, its what you know. If you interview some of these young adults and ask them if they think they were abused by their parent/guardian growing up and often times they would say no. Ask specific questions like, ever hit? yah, with an object? Sure, Any bruising? All the time. They don't think of it as abuse because that is all they know.

I'm not saying the circumstances he was born into "is" to blame. I'm saying it is a contributing factor. Rysheed shouldn't get a pass, he's an adult who was aware of what he was doing was wrong, he should be held accountable. However the ability to make the "right choice" as you say isn't as simple as you may think.     

pmg911

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #43 on: June 03, 2016, 12:49:20 PM »




You make it sound as if that should be a deterrent for a child. For some, yes, but if all you saw was crime, drugs, criminals, jail, etc.. growing up you may not see it as a bad thing, its what you know.


As this statement applies to Jordan...    maybe it was what he knew as kid but he was able to get out of that situation and see a different world in college....  he saw that basketball could give him the way out and he obviously didn't care...    he made adult decisions and now rightfully has to deal with adult consequences.




paultzman

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #44 on: June 03, 2016, 12:52:54 PM »
Just a tidbit; apparently after his freshman year at SJU, Jordan was given opportunity to spend time with John Lucas program, but declined.

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #45 on: June 03, 2016, 01:28:09 PM »




You make it sound as if that should be a deterrent for a child. For some, yes, but if all you saw was crime, drugs, criminals, jail, etc.. growing up you may not see it as a bad thing, its what you know.


As this statement applies to Jordan...    maybe it was what he knew as kid but he was able to get out of that situation and see a different world in college....  he saw that basketball could give him the way out and he obviously didn't care...    he made adult decisions and now rightfully has to deal with adult consequences.





I caught beatings as a kid. I guess that would be a good excuse to rob and shoot people. Thug life for Baldi

Marillac

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #46 on: June 03, 2016, 01:44:07 PM »
"Blaming the social cycle and the circumstances he was born into is ridiculous and part of the problem in America today."

How many times during your youth have you had to rummage through trash to find a meal to eat? Or sleep outside in the rain? Don't underestimate the circumstances that faces some of our youth today and the impact it can have on their thought process.

"This kid saw the world around him in which he grew up. . crime, drugs, criminals, people off to jail, etc......All he had to do was make the right choices and he did not , He choose to keep going back home, to stay in the cycle.."

You make it sound as if that should be a deterrent for a child. For some, yes, but if all you saw was crime, drugs, criminals, jail, etc.. growing up you may not see it as a bad thing, its what you know. If you interview some of these young adults and ask them if they think they were abused by their parent/guardian growing up and often times they would say no. Ask specific questions like, ever hit? yah, with an object? Sure, Any bruising? All the time. They don't think of it as abuse because that is all they know.

I'm not saying the circumstances he was born into "is" to blame. I'm saying it is a contributing factor. Rysheed shouldn't get a pass, he's an adult who was aware of what he was doing was wrong, he should be held accountable. However the ability to make the "right choice" as you say isn't as simple as you may think.     

I think you've watched Oliver Twist one too many times. WIC gives mothers with children very generous allowances. Also, every school Jordan attended almost certainly gave out free breakfast AND lunch. That says nothing of the benefits he received as a superstar athlete traveling the country for free and getting per diem while loading up on piles of free sneakers and gear he could sell to his friends.

Jordan's life in the ghetto as a superstar athlete was easier than most kids lives in the middle class. He was the prince of North Philly. His downfall was that nobody ever told him no.
« Last Edit: June 03, 2016, 01:48:09 PM by Marillac »

redslope

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #47 on: June 03, 2016, 03:53:14 PM »
Just a tidbit; apparently after his freshman year at SJU, Jordan was given opportunity to spend time with John Lucas program, but declined.
. Funny because I thought that JL had done so much for D'angelo that he could have benefited from the JL program after his first year.  Thanks for the info as it further illustrates what a fool he was.

Foad

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #48 on: June 03, 2016, 05:26:50 PM »
As this statement applies to Jordan...    maybe it was what he knew as kid but he was able to get out of that situation and see a different world in college....  he saw that basketball could give him the way out and he obviously didn't care...    he made adult decisions and now rightfully has to deal with adult consequences.

Do you think if he'd had a different child hood he'd have made different decisions as an adult? All the literature correlates single family households with crime, poverty, suicide, drug abuse and 100 other pathologies. I'm not saying it excuses his behavior, but its impossible to deny that his youthful deprivation made him the man he became.

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #49 on: June 03, 2016, 06:30:41 PM »
The worst thing to happen to the black family in the last fifty years is the LBJ "Great Society". Totally demasculated the black male and uninspired the black male for taking responsibility for his family. Why should the black male, who up until then had only mediocre patriarchal/father figures, marry the mother of his children, provide for his family and be a father to his children? Thanks to the "Great Society", single mothers and their children were given free housing [Section 8], free medical care [Medicaid], free money [welfare] and free additional benefits [WIC, Food Stamps, etc.] Why should the father of the children of single mothers get up at 4am to work a construction job? The state and federal benefits far outweigh what that man could have done in a legitimite blue collar or white collar job.

Its called a cycle, because there is no end, it just keeps going and going, generation to generation. Thank you LBJ and the Congress of 1965.

Foad

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #50 on: June 03, 2016, 06:41:22 PM »
The worst thing to happen to the black family in the last fifty years is the LBJ "Great Society". Totally demasculated the black male and uninspired the black male for taking responsibility for his family. Why should the black male, who up until then had only mediocre patriarchal/father figures, marry the mother of his children, provide for his family and be a father to his children? Thanks to the "Great Society", single mothers and their children were given free housing [Section 8], free medical care [Medicaid], free money [welfare] and free additional benefits [WIC, Food Stamps, etc.] Why should the father of the children of single mothers get up at 4am to work a construction job? The state and federal benefits far outweigh what that man could have done in a legitimite blue collar or white collar job.

Its called a cycle, because there is no end, it just keeps going and going, generation to generation. Thank you LBJ and the Congress of 1965.

Racist.

Just kidding. The democrat party comprises a permanent underclass maintained by a cadre of government and quasi government bureaucrats, unions and the chattering classes. The ultimate goal of the system is to diminish personal liberty in the name of the greater good and in favor of the benign fascism of an ever growing government leviathan. The destruction of minority families and communities is critical to that effort. 

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #51 on: June 03, 2016, 06:55:56 PM »
Wonder who black Jesus is voting for this year?

Foad

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #52 on: June 03, 2016, 07:01:18 PM »
Wonder who black Jesus is voting for this year?

Felons can't vote.

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #53 on: June 03, 2016, 07:04:06 PM »
Wonder who black Jesus is voting for this year?

Felons can't vote.

That's racist

goredmen

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #54 on: June 03, 2016, 07:08:30 PM »
The worst thing to happen to the black family in the last fifty years is the LBJ "Great Society". Totally demasculated the black male and uninspired the black male for taking responsibility for his family. Why should the black male, who up until then had only mediocre patriarchal/father figures, marry the mother of his children, provide for his family and be a father to his children? Thanks to the "Great Society", single mothers and their children were given free housing [Section 8], free medical care [Medicaid], free money [welfare] and free additional benefits [WIC, Food Stamps, etc.] Why should the father of the children of single mothers get up at 4am to work a construction job? The state and federal benefits far outweigh what that man could have done in a legitimite blue collar or white collar job.

Its called a cycle, because there is no end, it just keeps going and going, generation to generation. Thank you LBJ and the Congress of 1965.

Racist.

Just kidding. The democrat party comprises a permanent underclass maintained by a cadre of government and quasi government bureaucrats, unions and the chattering classes. The ultimate goal of the system is to diminish personal liberty in the name of the greater good and in favor of the benign fascism of an ever growing government leviathan. The destruction of minority families and communities is critical to that effort. 

It amazes me how the republican establishment has been unable to have this argument resonate with those in poverty, despite the fact that constant progressive rule has done absolutely nothing to elevate these underprivileged folks out of poverty. The liberals have a stranglehold on these voters despite purposely holding them down.

Those in poverty overwhelmingly vote liberal, so liberals need as many people in poverty as possible.

Unfortunately as the youth of this country moves further to the left than ever before, completely ignoring how liberal policies have destroyed everything they've touched in the history of man, instances like this with young talented underprivileged kids and young adults like Rysheed throwing everything away for no reason will continue to be commonplace.

SJUFAN

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #55 on: June 03, 2016, 07:27:33 PM »
"Blaming the social cycle and the circumstances he was born into is ridiculous and part of the problem in America today."

How many times during your youth have you had to rummage through trash to find a meal to eat? Or sleep outside in the rain? Don't underestimate the circumstances that faces some of our youth today and the impact it can have on their thought process.

"This kid saw the world around him in which he grew up. . crime, drugs, criminals, people off to jail, etc......All he had to do was make the right choices and he did not , He choose to keep going back home, to stay in the cycle.."

You make it sound as if that should be a deterrent for a child. For some, yes, but if all you saw was crime, drugs, criminals, jail, etc.. growing up you may not see it as a bad thing, its what you know. If you interview some of these young adults and ask them if they think they were abused by their parent/guardian growing up and often times they would say no. Ask specific questions like, ever hit? yah, with an object? Sure, Any bruising? All the time. They don't think of it as abuse because that is all they know.

I'm not saying the circumstances he was born into "is" to blame. I'm saying it is a contributing factor. Rysheed shouldn't get a pass, he's an adult who was aware of what he was doing was wrong, he should be held accountable. However the ability to make the "right choice" as you say isn't as simple as you may think.     

I think you've watched Oliver Twist one too many times. WIC gives mothers with children very generous allowances. Also, every school Jordan attended almost certainly gave out free breakfast AND lunch. That says nothing of the benefits he received as a superstar athlete traveling the country for free and getting per diem while loading up on piles of free sneakers and gear he could sell to his friends.

Jordan's life in the ghetto as a superstar athlete was easier than most kids lives in the middle class. He was the prince of North Philly. His downfall was that nobody ever told him no.

Respect you opinion but generous allowance? If by generous you mean enough to ensure survival then yeah very generous. Do you know what the allowances actually are?

Juice - 128oz
Milk - 16 qt.
Cereal - 36 oz.
Fruits and Vegetables - $8
Peanut butter - 18 oz
Eggs - 1 dozen
Beans - 64 oz
Whole wheat - 2 lbs

This is the maximum package a child will get per month and your only eligible if you are under 185% of the FPL, 1-4 years. Once the child hits 5, no longer eligible. School lunch and breakfast? Again great and its better than nothing, but I guess that means you believe that a child shouldn't eat dinner and since they receive school breakfast and lunch they shouldn't be hungry for the rest of the day. Many of you speak and criticize from the outside looking in making judgment based off theoretical applications and have no clue what is actually going on. Do you know how many parents sell what little benefits they have for drugs? Its much closer to Oliver Twist than you may want to believe.     

Jordan's life was easier than most middle class kids is an insane comment. Its even more scarier that many may believe that notion. How many of your close family and friends were murdered? When you grow up in poverty, many children's' role models are the pushers, pimps, hustler's, gang bangers, and thieves. That's what they mostly see around them on a daily basis and grow up aspiring to be. Is that what the middle class kids see? Is their parents selling their lunch money for drugs? Or is there parents making sure they are fed, go to school, help them with their home work and maybe even read them a story before they go to bed in there very own room. Sure there are bad example in middle class as well just as there are some good examples of doing the right things in poverty ridden neighborhoods but it gets lost inside of all the madness. A kid sees some one who we may consider doing things the right way live on the same block as all the other hooligans. It gets lost.

Again lets not make any excuses for the young man, at some point he has to grow up and take responsibility for his actions. Lets not pretend however than somehow he and the multitude of young people like him (minus his ability) somehow had it better because they were eligible for WIC and schools free nutrition program.

SJUFAN

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #56 on: June 03, 2016, 07:43:37 PM »
The worst thing to happen to the black family in the last fifty years is the LBJ "Great Society". Totally demasculated the black male and uninspired the black male for taking responsibility for his family. Why should the black male, who up until then had only mediocre patriarchal/father figures, marry the mother of his children, provide for his family and be a father to his children? Thanks to the "Great Society", single mothers and their children were given free housing [Section 8], free medical care [Medicaid], free money [welfare] and free additional benefits [WIC, Food Stamps, etc.] Why should the father of the children of single mothers get up at 4am to work a construction job? The state and federal benefits far outweigh what that man could have done in a legitimite blue collar or white collar job.

Its called a cycle, because there is no end, it just keeps going and going, generation to generation. Thank you LBJ and the Congress of 1965.

All this time I thought slavery was the ultimate cause of the disenfranchisement that plagued the black family/community. It was LBJ and Congress in 1965... dam those liberals, life was so much better for the black community prior to that.

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #57 on: June 03, 2016, 07:46:13 PM »
Wow!

Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #58 on: June 03, 2016, 07:50:16 PM »
It's not the governments job to feed kids. If you can't take care of your kid or don't want to, don't have them. Keep your legs crossed and zipper up . If you can't take care of yourself, how can you possibly provide for your 7 kids?

Foad

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Re: Rysheed Jordan - Skills for Life
« Reply #59 on: June 03, 2016, 08:19:16 PM »
The worst thing to happen to the black family in the last fifty years is the LBJ "Great Society". Totally demasculated the black male and uninspired the black male for taking responsibility for his family. Why should the black male, who up until then had only mediocre patriarchal/father figures, marry the mother of his children, provide for his family and be a father to his children? Thanks to the "Great Society", single mothers and their children were given free housing [Section 8], free medical care [Medicaid], free money [welfare] and free additional benefits [WIC, Food Stamps, etc.] Why should the father of the children of single mothers get up at 4am to work a construction job? The state and federal benefits far outweigh what that man could have done in a legitimite blue collar or white collar job.

Its called a cycle, because there is no end, it just keeps going and going, generation to generation. Thank you LBJ and the Congress of 1965.

All this time I thought slavery was the ultimate cause of the disenfranchisement that plagued the black family/community. It was LBJ and Congress in 1965... dam those liberals, life was so much better for the black community prior to that.

http://www.quotes.net/quote/57364