Malcolm Ebiowei is pure BALLER 2022
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Re: Malcolm Ebiowei is pure BALLER 2022
My wife has had locks since soon after she graduated from university. She’s used to it now but the discrimination and insults she received in Nigeria just because of her dreads was unbelievable.maceo4 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 6:58 pmBut that’s sad, because these hairstyles are native to us, so we should be the most understanding and accepting of them, of course I can see a society that is majority white with straight hair wouldn’t totally understand the styles that are native to folks with curly/coarse hair and would have to be taught, but what’s our own excuse?Enugu II wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 5:37 pmDamunkDamunk wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 4:21 pmThanks maceo4.maceo4 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 4:00 pmThis talks about it with quotes from Finidi and a picture - that they asked him to cut his dreads at the time and sort of humiliated him before ultimately dropping him, na waDamunk wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 1:12 pmWow. Really?bret- hart wrote: ↑Sat Jun 25, 2022 1:54 pm Dude was supposed to be part of the last u17 team but Manu dropped him for some "big man's," kid.
https://www.pulse.ng/sports/football/su ... er/fh8benp
I’ve never got this stupidity Nigerian authorities have towards locks.
We have ‘dada’ as part of our culture yet we criminalise dreads.
I hope he has gotten over the humiliation and hasn’t deleted us as an option.
It is a shame. But to be correct, it is not just Nigerian authorities. You find the same in the West where braids were frowned upon in the corporate world until a huge fight on that issue ensued.
The only thing I can think of is to assert a certain power over and dominate youth as is prevalent in Nigerian culture. Else why is it of so much importance to them when all sorts of hair styles are prevalent among footballers (we are not even talking about the corporate world) and his parents don’t have a problem with it why is it anybody else’s problem? When I watch the dynamic of a lot of our youth team players and how their coaches relate to them it looks like the military or worse, it’s something that’s definitely gonna be foreign to a lot of diaspora kids and off putting.
The commonest was the wahala at police checkpoints at night. Automatically she was a weed smoker and nothing she could say could change their view.
Still happens today but less so now that she’s no longer a skinny youth.
"Ole kuku ni gbogbo wọn "
Re: Malcolm Ebiowei is pure BALLER 2022
DamunkDamunk wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 8:07 pmMy wife has had locks since soon after she graduated from university. She’s used to it now but the discrimination and insults she received in Nigeria just because of her dreads was unbelievable.maceo4 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 6:58 pmBut that’s sad, because these hairstyles are native to us, so we should be the most understanding and accepting of them, of course I can see a society that is majority white with straight hair wouldn’t totally understand the styles that are native to folks with curly/coarse hair and would have to be taught, but what’s our own excuse?Enugu II wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 5:37 pmDamunkDamunk wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 4:21 pmThanks maceo4.maceo4 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 4:00 pmThis talks about it with quotes from Finidi and a picture - that they asked him to cut his dreads at the time and sort of humiliated him before ultimately dropping him, na waDamunk wrote: ↑Sun Jun 26, 2022 1:12 pmWow. Really?bret- hart wrote: ↑Sat Jun 25, 2022 1:54 pm Dude was supposed to be part of the last u17 team but Manu dropped him for some "big man's," kid.
https://www.pulse.ng/sports/football/su ... er/fh8benp
I’ve never got this stupidity Nigerian authorities have towards locks.
We have ‘dada’ as part of our culture yet we criminalise dreads.
I hope he has gotten over the humiliation and hasn’t deleted us as an option.
It is a shame. But to be correct, it is not just Nigerian authorities. You find the same in the West where braids were frowned upon in the corporate world until a huge fight on that issue ensued.
The only thing I can think of is to assert a certain power over and dominate youth as is prevalent in Nigerian culture. Else why is it of so much importance to them when all sorts of hair styles are prevalent among footballers (we are not even talking about the corporate world) and his parents don’t have a problem with it why is it anybody else’s problem? When I watch the dynamic of a lot of our youth team players and how their coaches relate to them it looks like the military or worse, it’s something that’s definitely gonna be foreign to a lot of diaspora kids and off putting.
The commonest was the wahala at police checkpoints at night. Automatically she was a weed smoker and nothing she could say could change their view.
Still happens today but less so now that she’s no longer a skinny youth.
It is crazy!!! A similar issue exists with tattoo. When is that we can go beyond these, beyond ethnicity, and other such mentality? We miss a lot of opportunities applying these shortcuts analyzing people that stand before us.
The difficulties of statistical thinking describes a puzzling limitation of our mind: our excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and the uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world and to underestimate the role of chance in events -- Daniel Kahneman (2011), Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics